
■^H 






wa 








ftcter 



V*w 



(5X, 



_ i Xj) 







# fi?§@pamme 



OF THE 



Actors f unb Pair, 



]\Tadisor) §qaare (jxardcr^, 



May 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 1th, 



1892. 



PRESS OF J. W. PRATT & SON, 88 4 90 GOLD STREET, NEW YORK. 







TAILORS 
MILLINERS 
f FURRIERS 
PRICES MOD£MT£ ' 




M 9 m 
Copy _ 



Pgtoi^s' Fund Paii^ ©ommittbb. 



M. PALMER, Chairman. 

H. C. MINER, Vice-Chairman. 

FRANK W. SANGER, Treasurer. 

DANIEL FROHMAN, Secretary. 
LOUIS ALDRICH. 

CHAS. W. THOMAS. 

AL. HAYMAN. 

A. B de FRECE. 



Somen's Cxegotive Faii^ Committee. 



Mrs. A. M. PALMER, President. 

Mrs. EDWARD E. KIDDER, ist Vice-President. 

Mrs. A. C. VAN BRUNT, 2d Vice-President. 
Miss GEORGIA CAYVAN, Secretary. 

Miss EMMA FROHMAN, Corresponding Secretary. 

Miss ALICE FISCHER, Recording Secretary. 



P VERY PERSON OF REFINED TASTE 

USES THE GREATEST CARE IN THE 

SELECTION OF THEIR CORRESPOND- 



ENCE PAPERS. THE 



Whiting Paper Company, 

- - - OF HOLYOKE, - - - 
MAKE THE FINEST PAPERS 



FOR SOCIETY USE. THEIR 



"STANDARD LINEN" 



IS UNEQUALED FOR PURIFY OF STOCK 
AND EASY WRITING PROPERTIES. . 
EVERY DEALER IN FINE STATIONERY 
CARRIES THESE GOODS IN STOCK OR 
CAN OBTAIN THEM FROM US FOR YOU. 



Whiting Paper Company, 

NEW YORK FACTORIES AND SALESROOMS : 

148, 1^0, 192 DUANE STREET. 



PATR0NS iP PATR0NESSES. 

Ex-President and Mrs. Grover Cleveland, 

Vice-President and Mrs. Levi P. Morton, 

His Excellency Governor Roswell P. Flower 

and Mrs. Flower, 

Hon. Chauneey M. and Mrs. Depew, 

Hon. Frank and Mrs. Hiseoek, 

Hon. David B. Hill, 

Hon. Theo. W. and Mrs. Myers, 
Mr. Edwin Booth, 

Hon. Hugh J. Grant, 

Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, 

Mr. and Mrs. Geo. J. Gould. 



The (]i<ande$t and most Complete Establishment 



FOR THE 



Manufactnring of 



pine hats 



INSPEeTIO/N SOLieiTEB, 



■£• E. M. KNOX, 4 



in the World. 




GRAND AND ST. MARK'S AVENUES, BROOKLYN, N. Y. 

RETAIL: STORES. 

212 Broadway (cor. of Fulton), New York. 
194 Fifth Ave. (under Fifth Ave. Hotel), New York. 
340 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. 

191 and 193 State Street (under the Palmer House), Chicago. 

— and — 
Represented by Agents (i. e., the leading Hatter,) in every City of the United States. 

NONE GENUINE WITHOUT THE TRADE MARK. 



^ONOI^AI^Y FA IF? ©OMMITTEE. 



Vice-Pres. and Mrs. Levi P. Morton. 

Ex-Pres. and Mrs. Grover Cleveland. 

Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Anderson. 

Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Andrews. 

Mr. and Mrs. Jas. L. Anthony. 

Col. and Mrs. D. S. Appleton, Jr. 

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Arkell. 

Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Armour. 

Hon. and Mrs. J. H. V. Arnold. 

Gen. and Mrs. L. Aspinwall, Jr. 

Mr. and Mrs. John Jacob Astor. 

Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Auchincloss. 

Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Baer. 

Mr. and Mrs. George F. Baker. 

Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Ballou. 

Mr. and Mrs. James Lenox Banks. 

Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Barker. 

Mdme. de Barrios. 

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barsotti. 

Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Bartlett. 

Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Baudouine. 

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Baumgarten. 

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Baylis. 

Mr. and Mrs. F. Beck. 

Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Beckwith. 

Mr. and Mrs. Clark Bell. 

Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Benedict. 

Jas. Gordon Bennett. 

Mr. and' Mrs. W. G. Berlin. 

Mr. and Mrs. E. G Blackford. 



Hon. and Mrs. J. G. Blaine. 

Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius N. Bliss. 

Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Bloomingdale. 

Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Bogart. 

Mr. and Mrs. S. U. Bonfils. 

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bonner. 

Mr. and Mrs. S. Borg. 

Mr. and Mrs. G. S. Bowdoin. 

Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Brewster. 

Mr. and Mrs. Calvin S. Brice. 

Mr. and Mrs. Fred. Bronson. 

Hon. and Mrs. Wm. Brookfield. 

Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Browning. 

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Budge. 

Mr. and Mrs. M. I. Burrill. 

Gen. and Mrs. Daniel Butterfield. 

Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Calhoun. 

Mr. and Mrs. Addison Cammack. 

Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Cammann. 

Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie. 

Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Carr. 

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Carroll. 

Mr. and Mrs. Chas. E. Caryl. 

Mr. and Mrs. John Claflin. 

Gen. Emmons Clark. 

Mr. and Mrs. J. I. C. Clarke. 

His Excellency Gov. Roswell P. Flower 

and Mrs. Flower. 
Hon. Theo. W. and Mrs. Myers. 
Gen. and Mrs. Floyd Clarkson. 




AIBEM4RIE HOTEXi. 

Copyriglitea.. 

YOUMANS. 
CELEBRATED HATS. 

Style and Quality Unequai ed. 

The superior quality of the material used, the exquisite design, 
the lightness in weight and the great demand, is a 
guarantee that Youmans has no superior. 

LADIES' RIDING H A.T S . 

Livery Hats Always in Stock. 

MARTIN'S ENGLISH UMBRELLAS. 

iioj, 719 and 158 'Broadway, New York. 

Authorized Agents for the sale of these Celebrated Hals 
in every city in the United States. 



Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Clapp. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Clausen. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clausen, Jr. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Clews. 
Col. and Mrs. John A. Cockerill. 
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Colgate. 
Gen. and Mrs. C. H. T. Collis. 
Mr. and Mrs. Jas. J. Coogan. 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cooper. 
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Coudert. 
Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Coudert. 
Mr. and Mrs. Elliot C. Cowden. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Cowles. 
Hon. John D. Crimmins. 
Col. and Mrs. S. V. R. Cruger. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. Bay. Cutting. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Croker. 
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dana. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. de Bary. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. de Cordova. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. de Garmendia. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Delafield. 
Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Delmonico. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Demorest. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Denning. 
Hon. and Mrs. J. F. Dillon. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Dillon. 
Mr. Sidney Dillon. 
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. B. Dinsmore. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Dithmar. 
Judge and Mrs. A. J. Dittenhoefer. 
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. O. Donoghue. 
Dr. and Mrs. R. O. Doremus. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Drayton. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Drexel. 
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. A. Duer. 



Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dugro. 

Judge and Mrs. P. H. Dugro. 

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. B. Duncan. 

Robert Dunlap. 

Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Duval. 

Mr. and Mrs. C. A. du Vivier. 

Mr. and Mrs. Elisha Dyer. 

Mr. Thomas A. Edison. 

Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Ehret. 

Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Ehrich. 

Hon. and Mrs. Edwin Einstein. 

Hon. and Mrs. S. B. Elkins. 

Mr. Duncan Elliot. 

Hon. Joel B. Erhardt. 

Hon. and Mrs. Wm. M. Evarts. 

Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Fahnestock. 

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Fields. 

Hon. and Mrs. A. P. Fitch. 

Hon. and Mrs. S. W. Fairchild. 

Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt. 

Hon. Hugh J. Grant. 

Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Flagler. 

Mr. and Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish. 

Gen. and Mrs. E. Ferrero. 

Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Fellows. 

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Fisk. 

Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Francklyn. 

Hon. and Mrs. John Fox. 

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fuller. 

Mr. and Mrs. Fred. Goodridge. 

Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Gerard. 

Hon. and Mrs. Wm. R. Grace. 

Hon. and Mrs. Thos. F. Gilroy. 

Rev. Dr. and Mrs. G. Gottheil. 

Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Gilmore. 

Mr. and Mrs. Hugh R. Garden. 

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Godwin. 




eto-fck Em 



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News departments in which THE TIMES particularly excels : 



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10 



Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Gallaway. 
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Gilder. 
Mr. F. L. Gunther. 
Mr. and Mrs. B. Gillam. 
Mr. and Mrs. Fred. Gallatin. 
Hon. and Mrs. A. S. Gallup. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gerlach. 
Mr. and Mrs. Bryce Gray. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Grovesteen. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Gillig. 
Mr. and Mrs. Theo. Hellman. 
Mr. and Mrs. Russell B. Harrison. 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hitchcock. 
Mr. and Mrs. T. Havemeyer. 
Hon. and Mrs. Abr. S. Hewitt. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Huntington. 
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hoe, Jr. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hamersley. 
Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Hoyt. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Hotchkiss. 
Gov. and Mrs. Geo. Hoadly. 
Col. and Mrs. F. K. Hain. 
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac H. Herts. 
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Hunter. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Herrick. 
Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Hays. 
Hon. and Mrs. Jacob Hess. 
Mr. and Mrs. George G. Haven. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Hazard. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Harper. 
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Harper. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Hilton. 
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Hollins. 
Rev. George H. Houghton. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Hunt. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Haines. 
Mrs. Henry Hermann. 



Mr. and Mrs. Warren Higley. 
Hon. and Mrs. E. A. Hendricks. 
Hon. David B. Hill. 
Mr. Edwin Booth. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Helmuth. 
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Howard, Jr. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Irvin, Jr. 
Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Iddings. 
Mr. and Mrs. John H. Inman. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Ide. 
Col. and Mrs. Robert Ingersoll. 
Mr. and Mrs. John B. Ireland. 
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Iselin. 
Mr. and Mrs. Brayton Ives. 
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Jaffray. 
Col. and Mrs. William Jay. 
Rev. Dr. and Mrs. H. S. Jacobs. 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. James. 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Johnson. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Johnson. 
Mr. and Mrs. Eastman Johnson. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Juilliard. 
Mr. and Mrs. Brad. Johnson, Jr. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Kernochan. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. Keppler. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. Kutroff. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Knox. 
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Kidd. 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Kirby. 
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Kelly, Jr. 
Mr. and Mrs. Sheppard Knapp. 
Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Knevals. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Knoedler. 
Mr. and Mrs. Luther Kountze. 
Mr. and Mrs. D. H. King, Jr. 
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent King. 
Hon. and Mrs. Edward Kearney. 




Interior View of the Cafe in 
■3(OTEL 1JENDOME 
Broadway & 41st Street, 
New York. 



12 



Mr. and Mrs. J. Forbes Leith. 
Mrs. Hicks Lord. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ad. Ladenburg. 
Mr. and Mrs. E. Lauterbach. 
Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Logan. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. D. Lanier. 
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lanier. 
Col. and Mrs. Daniel S. Lamont. 
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Lord. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Leavitt. 
Mr. and Mrs. G. de Forest Lord. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lawrence. 
Mr. and Mrs. Julius J. Lyons. 
Mr. and Mrs. George Legg. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Langdon. 
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis May. 
Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Martin. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ogden Mills. 
Hon. and Mrs. John McClave. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ward McAllister. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Marquand. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. Pierpont Morgan. 
Mr. and Mrs. R. A. McCurdy. 
Hon. and Mrs. E. D. Morgan. 
Mr. Ferdinand Motz. 
Mr. and Mrs. George J. Gould. 
Hon. Frank and Mrs. Hiscock. 
Judge and Mrs. Henry Murray. 
Hon. and Mrs. R. M. Morgan. 
Hon. and Mrs. Warner. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Mohr. 
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McKim. 
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Martin. 
Mr. and Mrs. B. Matthews. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Montant. 
Major and Mrs. C. R. Miller. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Morean. 



Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. McElroy. 
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Merrill. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry I. Nicholas. 
Mr. and Mrs. Max Nathan. 
Mr. and Mrs. Delancey Nicoll. 
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. C. Noyes. 
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Oelrichs. 
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ottmann. 
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh O'Neill. 
Hon. and Mrs. Miles O'Brien. 
Mr. and Mrs. Olyphant. 
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Parsons. 
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando B. Potter. 
Gen. and Mrs. Horace Porter. 
Hon. and Mrs. Thomas C. Piatt. 
Judge and Mrs. Roger A. Pryor. 
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. H. Peabody. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Peckham. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Pomeroy. 
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. B. Post, Jr. 
Hon. and Mrs. H. H. Porter. 
Gen. and Mrs. Fitz John Porler. 
Mr. Morris Phillips. 
Gen. and Mrs. Postley. 
Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Polhemus. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Phillips. 
Mr. Seaver Page. 
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Ruppert. 
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Rosenwald. 
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Russell. 
Mr. and Mrs. V. H. Rothschild. 
Dr. and Mrs. D. B. St. J. Roosa. 
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Reno. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. Rothschild. 
Dr. A. Ruppaner. 
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Sloane. 
Hon. A. L. Sanger. 



13 



s 



0Y0NNHH LINE 




From NEW YORK, BOSTON, PHILADELPHIA. 

fastest Passenger Steamships Flying the 
American Flag. 



FIRST-CLASS TABLE D HOTE. 



UNRIVALED ACCOMMODATIONS. 



Connecting at Savannah with Railroads for all 
Points South and Southwest. 



Address for particulars regarding Freight or Passage, 



Richardson & Barnard, 

AGENTS, 
Lewis Wliiirf, l: n. 



Wm L. James, 

AGENT, 

13 So. 3d St., Philadelphia 
R. L. Walker, 

AGENT, 
New Pier 3i», North River, New York. 



W. H RHETT, 

GENERAL AGENT, C. R. R., 
31* Rroiidwny, N. Y. 



J. D. HASHAGEN, 

EAST. AGENT, S., F. & W. R'Y CO., 

201 Broadway, N. Y. 



■ ompli merits of the 



DUNBAR BOX 



AND 



LUMBER CO., 



No. 2S2 Eleventh Avenue, 



NEW YORK. 



lieatrical Lumber a Specialty. 



Col. Elliot F. Shepard. 

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Steinway. 

Mr. and Mrs. Jacob H. Schiff. 

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Sloan. 

Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Stewart. 

Gen. D. E. Sickles. 

Mr. and Mrs. Edmund C. Stanton. 

Mr. W. E D. Stokes. 

Mr. and Mrs. Anson P. Stokes. 

Hon. Carl Schurz. 

Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Shayne. 

Hon. and Mrs. Oscar S. Straus. 

Hon. Chauncey M. and Mrs. Depew. 

Hon and Mrs. J. E. Simmons. 

Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Schell. 

Mr. and Mrs. Anton Seidl. 

Mr. and Mrs. Isaac N. Seligman. 

Rev. Dr. and Mrs. J. Silverman. 

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Swan. 

Mr. and Mrs. Francis Schneider. 

Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Seligman. 

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stern. 

Mr. and Mrs. William Schaus. 

Mr. Chas. S. Smith. 

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stanton. 

Mr. and Mrs. John H. Starin. 

Mr. and Mrs. George H. Scott. 

Mr. and Mrs. George Storm. 

Mr. and Mrs. G. Waldo Smith. 

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Seibert. 

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Alex. Smith. 

Mr. and Mrs. F. K. Sturges. 

Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Spofford. 

Mr and Mrs. Russell Sage. 

Mr. and Mrs. Grant B. Schley. 

Mr. and Mrs. George K. Sistare. 



Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stuyvesant. 
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Studwell. 
Mr. and Mrs. Ballard Smith. 
Col. and Mrs. Wm. L. Strong. 
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Tilford. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. McK. Twombly. 
Mr. Joseph Thoron. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Tiffany. 
Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Thurber. 
Mr. and Mrs. Evan Thomas. 
Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Tiffany. 
Mr. and Mrs. George I. Tyson. 
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Turner. 
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Turnure. 
Hon. and Mrs. Cornelius Van Cott. 
Mr. and Mrs. K. Van Rensselaer. 
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Villard. 
Mr. and Mrs. F. K. Vanderbilt. 
Mr. and Mrs. F. Leslie Wilde. 
Mr. and Mrs. I. Wormser. 
Dr. and Mrs. Gerardus Wynkoop. 
Dr. and Mrs. W. Seward Webb. 
Hon. and Mrs. W. C. Whitney. 
Mr. and Mrs. W. Orme Wilson. 
Mr. and Mrs. L. Windmuller. 
Mr. and Mrs. Stanford White. 
Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Wilson. 
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wasserman. 
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Webster. 
Hon. and Mrs. Benjamin Wood. 
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Whitney. 
Mr. and Mrs. G. Wetherbee. 
Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Wilson. 
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Wheeler. 
Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Zollikoffer. 



A LETTER FROM MADAME ADELINA PATTI. 

The Windsor Hotel, 
fifth avenue, new york. 

Apr. 23d, 1883. 
Dear Sir : 

Your favor of the 20th inst. requesting permission to use my 
name ttpcn a brand of Cigars of your own manufacture, is just received. 
You have my hearty assent to the slight favor you ask, as I am' sure 
the Cigars will be of so good a quality as to leave a pleasant recollection 
of their namesake. 

Thanking you for your courtesy, I remain, dear sir, 

Sincerely yours, 

ADELINA PATTI. 
Louis F. Fromer, Esq. 



FLOR DE 



J^Idblima 



Hd 



A0"FI 



Vauis IF. Isomer, j New York, 
~~ / Key West. 




s 



T is now nine years since we first introduced these 
justly famous Cigars, and during that time they 
have made a NATIONAL REPUTATION. 



eft 



ND, owing to their superior quality and workman- 
ship, are more favorably known and appreciated 
by smokers, than any other domestic-made 
HAVANA CIGAR on the market. 



$ 



N sale by first-class dealers everywhere, also 
leading Hotels, Cafes, Clubs, and Pullman 
Dining Cars. 



!E. (L 2Hazarcl &r do., • r r 

} 1 \ GUIS r rTGTTL&T 

Wholesale Agents, m ^ / \J\A.\-J X, . X I WIUWI j 



North Moore & Hudson Streets, 
NEW YORK. 



Mann facturer , 

214 & 216 E. 52D St., Nlw York. 



16 




ADELINA PATH. 



I AGNE3 B 



U 



A 



I #--•!•• 



THE excellence of Imported Cigars is a thing of the past. Every smoker knows that the import stamp no longer is a 
guarantee of a cigar's quality. Imported Cigars have deteriorated from various causes, chief among which is the feeling 
among cigar manufacturers in Havana that the world must come to them for fine cigars, and hence their indifference and 
carelessness in supplying them. 

There is no reason why we cannot make as good, if not better cigars, than the manufacturers in Havana can. We buy the 
tobacco precisely where they do and we can purchase from the tobacco-producing countries of the world besides, which the cigar 
manufacturers of Havana are by Spanish law forbid to do. 

In choosing a name for our Cigars made of Imported materials, we think we have conserved every interest when we have 
selected the name, Agnes Booth. Agnes Booth has achieved for herself the proud title of "America's Dramatic Queen," and 
the cigar named after her has won unqualified praise for itself wherever it has been introduced. 

We purchase for its composition only the best quality Vuelta Abajo tobacco in Havana, where it is cured and stripped ; and 
for its wrapper we obtain only the choicest Sumatra tobacco absolutely free from bitterness. We manufacture the Agnes Booth 
Cigar in twenty sizes, all of the same stock ; but in the Perfectos, Deliciosos and Bouquet Extra Sizes, we employ none but 
Spanish workmen. 

An article of real merit is bound to win recognition, and we place the Agnes Booth Cigar before the public, confident in the 
results which its merits will attain. They have been only recently introduced, yet connoisseurs already pronounce them to be 
simply perfect. 

Gentlemen may smoke the Agnes Booth Cigar with the assurance that they are smoking the finest tobacco it is possible 
to procure. Give the Agnes Booth Cigar a trial, and judge whether this country cannot produce a cigar as fine as Cuba, and at 
two-thirds its cost. 



Agnes - - - 

Booth 
- - - Gigars 

Are the . . . 

Consumer's friend 

because in quality and workmanship they are 
equal to imported and 

COST FAR LESS. 



7,295,275 



Agnes - 
Booth 



Cigars 



Were sold in 1891, an increase over iSgo of 

45 PER CENT. 
During the same period 

Imported Cigars decreased 
35 per cent. 



THE VICTOR VALLETTE CO., 



MANUFACTURERS, 



New York. 



18 




AGNES BOOTH. 



What scours the dress, and removes the stain, 
And makes the goods like new again? 

DRY CLEANSING. 



What preserves the fabric, and renews the shade, 
In household goods of every grade? 

DRY CLEANSING. 



What cleans the garment by the highest art, 
And does it, too, without ripping apart? 

DRY CLEANSING. 



What makes like new, Coat, Pants, and Vest, 
And of all the processes is the best? 

DRY CLEANSING. 



"DRY C LEANSING" 

is a process particularly adapted to the treatment of fine fabrics in delicate colorings, and 
highly commends itself for Silk, Satin, and Evening Costumes. 

It thoroughly cleanses and removes all dirt and grease, revives colors, preserves fabric 
and finish, and imparts a brightness and luster to the goods unattainable by any other process. 

LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S 

Garments and Household Goods of every description 

• "DRY CLEANSED" • 

BY OUR UNEQUALED PROCESS. 

Lace Curtains and "Blankets "done up" equal to new. 

EVERY VARIETY OF DYEING. 



Staten Island Fancy Dyeing Establishment, 



BARRETT, NEPHEWS & CO. 



OFFieES: 



34 East 14th Street, New York 

12 John Street, 

19 West 42d Street, 

1 1 99 Broadway, 

844 Sixth Avenue, 

2320 Eighth Avenue, 

2 West 125th Street, 



336 Columbus Avenue, New York. 
315 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. 
480 Fulton Street, 
735 Fulton Street, 
1 1 77 Fulton Street, 
47 North Eighth Street, Phila. 
814 Arch Street, 
215 North Charles Street, Baltimore. 



GOODS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE. 

Send for Price List and Circular. 
Dry ClGcLIlSillJJ " * s J ust ^e thing for Theatrical Costumes. 

SPECIAL. RATES MADE TO COMPANIES FOR LARGE WARDROBES. 



'20 



The ladies of the FAIR Executive Committee 
beg to thank all the firms who have given their 
advertising patronage to their Souvenir Programme. 

The Mors Fund Fair of 18$ 2 

will ever be memorable in the annals of American 
Theatricals, and all who contributed to its financial 
success will be remembered with gratitude by those 
whom the FAIR will help. 

Mrs. A. M. PALMER, President. 

Mrs. EDWARD E. KIDDER, ist Vice-President. 

Mrs. A. C. VAN BRUNT, 2d Vice-President. 

Miss GEORGIA CAYVAN, Secretary. 

Miss EMMA FROHMAN, Corresponding Secretary. 

Miss ALICE FISCHER, Recording Secretary. 



^orijam {Solid j&lVef. 




When a Wedding or Birthday Gift is to be selected, or a Presentation Piece 
decided upon, the first thought is to find something unusual — that which is'not 
likely to be duplicated. 

Solid Silver in some shape or other is the most appropriate for many reasons, 
if such a piece can be secured. 

Our stock affords great diversity of design, which is an important consideration 
in making a selection of this kind. 

The variety and extent of our productions enable us to continually show not 
only new designs, but original articles for new purposes. 

A visit to our establishment will suggest many novel and appropriate pieces. 

Gorham M'fg Co., 

SILVERSniTHS, 

Broadway and 19th Street, New York. 

22 




A. M. PALMER. 



WALLIS IRON WORKS. 



CONTRACTORS FOR ALL KINDS OF 



Iron Construction 



IN THE UNITED STATES, AND EXPORT. 



PLANS AND ESTIMATES FURNISHED. 



THEATRE BUILDINGS. 

Amphion Theatre, Bedford Avenue, between Ninth and Division Streets, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

New Broadway Theatre, Broadway and 44th Street, New York City. 

Union Square Theatre, New York City. 

Harlem Opera House, 125th Street, New York City. 

Columbus Theatre, on 125th Street, between Fourth and Lexington Aves., New York City. 



MAIN OFFICE AND WORKS: 

7, 9, 11, 13 & 15 MORRIS STREET, 

6, 8, 10, 12 & 14 ESSEX STREET, 

AND 100 FEET ON NORTH RIVER, 

jrMMBMY €IT J T} W» J- %9 W» g. 

TELEPHONE CONNECTION, 38 JERSEY CITY. 



New York Office, 192 Broadway, 

TELEPHONE CONNECTION, 2455 CORTLANDT. 



Send for List of Bui/dings Erected in New York and Vicinity. 



24 




FRANK W. SANGER. 



p?e J^ off ma 9 \\ou$e 



FAVORITE FAMILY HOTEL. 




•■!• C^otT)fortablc. yorgelilve. Europear) piaQ. *f- 



MADISON SQUARE, NEW YORK. 



Rooms $2 per Day and Upwards.- 



Elegant Russian and Turkish Baths connected with Hotel. 
Ladies' hours 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. 




JULIA MARLOW. 



WILLIAM F. HOWE, 
ABRAHAM H. HUMMEL. 



HO VE & HfclMEL, j 

Counselors at £aw. 



Hd 



ractitioners in all the 
United States Courts. 



*.*■ *.* *.* *.* 

^iiy *> V* V* 



THEATRICAL CAUSES A SPECIALTY. 

136, 138 and 140 Leonard St. and 87 and 89 CentreSt, 

NEW YORK. 



EXTRACT FROM THE SPEECH OF WILLIAM F. HOWE, IN DEFEASE OF BURTOX 
C. WEBSTER, FOR MURDER, IN THE XEW YORK GENERAL 
SESSIOXS, MARCH 3d, iSgz. 



"You remember the remark of the District Attorney that Evelyn Granville 'was ONLY AN 
"Actress' ? 

" I am no orator, as Brutus was. I lack the fire of Cassius. Neither can I stir you, like another 
"Antony ; but I speak like Antony when I say, 'I am a plain, blunt man'; and, as Antony loved 
" Cffisar, so do I love the Stage. I love the Stage for its teachings, for the noble lessons of virtue 
"it inculcates ; and when it portrays vice, it does so that vice may be shunned and abhorred. 

"Asa rule, Society esteems actors and actresses, among whom are many noble, brilliant, cul- 
" tured, highly-educated, refined, God-fearing women. They act and live on the stage, making it an 
" abode of Charity and Christian sympathy. Thousands of them have died leaving memories revered 
"and cherished, and thousands now live monuments of present adoration and respect." 

"THE STAGE," sneered the prosecuting officer. 

" I ignore this sneer, and brush it away with the contempt it merits." 




MARY ANDERSON. 



i&l GRIST! 







PATENT ^* f\ 

SKirt- 
5upportiQ(§ 

Qprset5 
Supporter 



Fii^e G orse t s to Qrder a Specialty. 

COMPETENT LADY FITTERS IN ATTENDANCE. 



gorset parlors: 
923 Broadway, New York. 




GEORGIA CAVYAN. 



•f|||| - 



]>Seeopd JNfatioi^al Bai?^ 



OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK 






-AND- 



1^ p'f^ /^ u W d ^S a f^ Deposit Co. 



FIFTH AVENdE, COR. 23B STREET, 



(FIFTH AVENUE HOTEL) 




•Ml* 




EDWIN BOOTH 



(Trade-Mark) 



PI, I raae - .Mark i -»— ^^ 
.&P. 
KID GLOVES 

PERFECT FITTING 



THE NEWEST SHADES 

THE LATEST STYLES 

THE HOST DURABLE 

THE BEST WORKHANSHIP. 

THEREFORE 

ALWAYS 
SATISFACTORY 

Every pair guaranteed. 
None genuine unless stamped 'P. & P.' 




HERBERT KELCEY. 








iH/fEE J/EWjtACWrfES 

ron the fyoMZ 

oo 

J\IL tfimjuflf(T J^eedllWohk 

Without 

ATtjuaiMEifrs fMp^wm?\ 





ADA REHAN. 



\[ ew yoric Q.ecuritu and --rust (ompariy, 

46 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. 

Capital, $1,000,000 

Surplus and Undivided Profits, 800,000 



CHARLES S. FAIRCHILD, President. 
WM. H. APPLE TOX, ist Vice-President. 



WM. L. STROXG, 2nd Vice-President. 
JOHX /.. LAM SOX, Secretary. 



O RCANIZED UNDER THE J.AWS O F NEW_ YORK. 

This Company is authorized to act as Executor, Trustee, Administrator, Guardian, Agent 
and Receiver, is a legal depository for Court and Trust Funds. Will take entire charge of Real 
and Personal Estates, collecting the income and profits, and attending to all such details as an 
individual in like capacity could do. 

Receives deposits subject to Sight Drafts, allowing Interest on daily balances, and issues 
Certificates of deposit bearing interest. Acts as Registrar and Transfer Agent cf all Stocks and 
Bonds. 

SPECIAL RATES OF INTEREST ALLOWED TO BANKS AND FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS. 




OLD DOMINION STEAMSHIP COMPANY. 

SAILING FROM 

Pier 26 {New No.) North River, Foot of 'Beach Street, New York. 
For NORFOLK, OLD POINT COMFORT AND NEWPORT NEWS, 

Tuesday, Wednesday, Tnursday and Saturday 

For RICHMOND, PETERSBURG AND CITY POIN T, 

Via James River, Wednesday and Saturday. 

Popular Route for Old Point Comfort and Virginia Beach, Va. 
The only Line reaching the Hvgeia Hotel and Fortress Monroe from New York, 

WITHOUT A CHANGE. 

Time between New York and Norfolk, Newport News, Virginia Beach and Old Point 
Comfort, 22 to 24 hours; to Richmond, 40 hours; to Petersburg, 40 hours; Norfolk to Wash- 
ington, D. C, 12 hours; Norfolk to Baltimore, 12 hours. 

ALL STEAMERS SAIL AT 3 P. M. FROM NEW YORK. 

IV. L. GUILLAUDEU, Traffic Manager. 

33 




MRS. JAMES BROWN POTTER. 



SMOKE 



"Jl?e 5e9ator" 






Brand of . 

Havana 
. . Cigars. 



For 


the reason 


that 


they have 


stood 


the 


test, 


and 


are 


preferred to tJie average 


imported 


cigar in 


the 


mar. 


ket to- 


day, 


and 


at the same time 


costing considerable less. 


Why 


not 


try i 


them and be 


convinced? 


. 




. 







THE FOLLOWING IS ONE OF THE LETTERS 
RECEIVED FROM Mli. CRANE: 

New York, October 21, 1890. 
Isaac Teichman's Sons : 

Gentlemen : — I wish to thank you for the cigars that you sent me. I am smoking them nightly 
with much pleasure and satisfaction. What more fitting than that the Senator should smoke a 
Senator Cigar in the last act of "The Senator." 

Yours very truly, W. H. CRANE. 



Isaac TeicHman's Sons, 



IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO PURCHASE 
THIS CIGAR FROM YOUR DEALER, WRITE MANUFACTURERS, 



TO US DIRECT. 



222 Greenwich Street, 

NEW YORK. 

40 




WM. H. CRANE, AS "THE SENATOR." 







Zi)ySAi sjj'j^j) 



Celebrated Hats 



Xadies' l\iding p^ AAI alking iA ats 

— AND 

THE DUNLAP SILK UMBRELLA. 

178 & iSo Fifth Ave., bet. 22d and 23d Streets, and 
181 Broadway, near Cortlandt St., New York. 

Palmer House, Chicago. 914 Chestnut St., Phila. 

Gold Medal awarded, Paris Exposition, 1889. 

ACCREDITED AGENCIES IN ALL PRINCIPAL CITIES. 



42 




LILLIAN RUSSELL. 



Sole T)epot of the celebrated 



and Q%3u>irrt>6 Kid Gloves. 



Chas, T. Jones, 

I/T\por(:?r>^ Retailer, 



1163 BROADWAY. 

Exclusively Gloves 

From the Finest French 

and English 

Manufacturers. 




1165 BROADWAY. 

Best Paris Makes 
Silk and Lisle Thread Hosiery, 

Silk and Lisle Thread 

Underwear, Fans, Laces, Etc, 

Parasols and Umbrellas, 

English Waterproofs. 



(NOTE TLiE ADDRESS), 



1163*1165 I^roadvuai/, Rew yorl^. 

fy orddeutscher J_^loyd o teamship C o. 

SHORT ROUTE to LONDON, (southX™), 

HAVRE (PARIS), and BREMEN. 

TIME, 7 days, and less, to London. The Fast Express Steamships SPREE, HA VEL, LAHN, 
SAALE, TRAVE, ALLER, EMS, ELBE, KAISER WILHELM II. Departures every 
Tuesday and Saturday. 

DII^ECJ past Express I^oute to tf?e /r\EDIJEI^/^Efl|f 

FIRST-CLASS Passenger Steamer Service between NEW YORK and GENOA. ITALY, by S. S. 
WERRA and EULDA. Time, less than eleven days. Passengers for the Italian Lakes, 
Switzerland, the Tyrol, will find this route the most direct, easiest and most comfortable. Switzer- 
land can be reached in six hours from Genoa. 



These steamers are all of the largest and most modern type, and are nnequaled as regards the excellence 
of their cuisine and the cabin accommodation. Owing to their powerful engines, they are able to maintain a 
high rate of speed in nearly all weather, thus arriving with great regularity. NO OVERCROWDING 
ON THESE STEAMERS. 



OELRICHS & CO., General Agents, 



Mo. 2 Bowling Green, 



NEW YORK. 




JOHN DREW, IN TAMING OF THE SHREW. 



V hen • YM • T ravel! 



carry: 



Jrauelers 



Vm 



OF THE 




American 
p ess Co. 



PRINCIPAL? HOTEL'S 

Receive them in payment of accounts j alio 

cashed by an extended list of Bankers throng Ji- 

outthe United States, Canad a, Europe, Asia, 6r°c. 

TRAVELER'S SIGNATURE 

Secures and Identifies Him. 

EXACT AMOUNT IN FOREIGN MONEY PRINTED ON CHEQUE WILL RE PAID. 

Cheques, Rates and further particulars can be obtained from any Agent of the AMERICAN 

EXPRESS CO., from Banks or Bankers representing us throughout 

the United States and Canada, or at the 

PRINCIPAL 0Fx r ICE 2L™ COMPANY, 65 BROADY/AY, NEW YORK. 



46 




MRS. BOWERS. 



Jl^e |^©pfel^ j\me¥\G®n I^e^iew. 



"THE INTELLIGENT AMERICAN CITIZEN'S HAND-BOOK ON THE GREAT 

QUESTIONS OF THE TIMES." 



THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW 

has been in the van of American thought for more than three- 
quarters of a century, ranking always with the best and most 
influential periodicals in the world. The New York Sun says of it : 

"THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW 

constantly offers to the public a programme of writers and essays 
that excite the reader and gratify the intellectual appetite. In 
this respect there is no other magazine that approaches the 
North American Review." 

It is neither a partisan nor a sectarian publication, but 

ALL SIDES OF ALL QUESTIONS 

in which intelligent people are interested are promptly discussed 
in its pages, and facts and arguments presented with all the ability 
and logical force of the most eminent writers in the world. 

MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. 

Among recent contributors to the Review on these sub- 
jects may be named Clara Morris, Edmund C. Stanton, 
W. H. Crane, Theodore Thomas, Charles Wyndham and 
Walter Damrosch. 

THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN. 

During the current year the Review will be of special inter- 
est and value, as it will lay before its readers the ablest discussions 
of the important questions of the campaign, prepared by the 
recognized leaders in the several political parties. 



The Review is for sale by all newsdealers, or will be sent postpaid by the Publishers. 
Price, 50 cents per copy ; $5.00 per year. 

THE N0RTH AMERICAN REVIEW, 

3 EAST 14TH STREET, NEW YORK. 

48 




ELLEN TERRY. 



r "*"/[ MONG the manufacturers of the North who early recognized the advantages of Key West 
_7 V- was the firm of Celestino Palacio & Co. After a successful beginning in New York, the 
&/M manufacturing branch of their business was removed to Key West, where they have 

■^*J \^_ j made steady progress along the highway of success. 

This firm has achieved an enviable reputation during the seven years of its existence. As man- 
ufacturers of high grade, clear Havana cigars, they rank among the leaders, the product of no other 
excelling in character, workmanship, shape and style, the production of their factory ; and many 
falling far short in some essential detail which enables wholesale and retail tobacconists to build up 
a successful and profitable trade. In this particular the packings issued by this firm are excellent 
and many are original. 

It should also be stated that at no time since this firm started in business have they ever used any 
material in their cigars except the highest grade Havana tobacco. 

They issue several brands, of which the " El Telegrafo" and " La Rosa" are the best known. 
They employ in their factory (No. 60 District of Florida) five hundred people, experts in the art of 
manufacturing cigars, and produce twelve million (12,000.000) annually. 

In the spring of 1888 Mr. -Celestino Palacio retired from business, and Mr. Ferdinand Hirsch, the 
remaining partner, purchased the good will, brands and property of the firm, and it is under his sole 
direction and management that the present degree of prosperity has been attained. 

On January 1st, iSgr, the firm of Celestino Palacio & Co. was succeeded by The Ferdinand 
Hirsch Company, incorporated under the laws of the State of New York, with a paid-up capital of 
$250,000, with the former sole owner of Celestino Paiacio & Co., Mr. Ferdinand Hirsch, as President, 
Mr. Domingo Villamil, Vice-President, and Mr. William Boehmer, Jr., Secretary and Treasurer. 
The office and salesroom are located at 

105 and 107 BEEKMAN STREET, NEW YORK. 



Established 1862. THEATRICAL LUMBER 

A Specialty. 

(^oii^pliEQerjts of ■ - - - 

JOHN Mg GLAVE, 

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 

Lumber and Hard Wood Merchant, 

PtoW MUl AttacM. 22D STEEET AND UTH AVENUS ' 

Telephone No. 220 18th Street. new cjohk. 

50 




SARAH BERNHARDT. 



CIGARS 



ill 1 



Popalarig krcowrc 
«4+i ipomihe :fj6" 

asffee highest Standard 
f/ew ^ork made eigar* 



,2* SALE B 



4D.HIRSCH & COMPANY 

B| 



52 




EDWARD De REZSKE. 



pDISON 



SYSTEM 

Incandescent Electric Lighting 

IS USED EXCLUSIVELY TO LIGHT 

MADISON SQUARE GARDEN. 



Artistic Fixtures, 

ELECTROLIERS, BRACKETS, ETC. 



■v-a_^" ^iij 



#- A M- CANDELABRA LAMPS. 



A'tf/ 



, ,.1,-.' 
1X 



MINIATURE LAMPS 

FOR SPECIAL, ILLUMINATED DECORATIONS. 






THEATRE ILLUMINATION. 

LIGHTS UNDER PERFECT CONTROL, 
BEAUTIFUL SCENIC EFFECTS. 



EDISON GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, 

EDISON BUILDING, BROAD STREET, NEW YORK. 



FIXTURE SHOW ROOMS, 275 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK. 



DISTRICT OFFICES: 
Canadian — Edison Building, 77 Bay St., Toronto. Can. 
Central — 173 & 175 Adams St., Chicago, 111. 

Eastern — Edison Building, Broad St., New York. 

New England — 25 Otis Street, Boston, Mass. 

Pacific Coast — Edison Bldg. , 112 Bush St., San Francisco, Cal. 
Pacific Northwest — Fleischner Building. Portland, Ore. 

Rocky Mountain — Masonic Building, Denver, Col. 

Mexican and South American Dept. — Edison Building, Broad St., New York. 

European Office — 34 Victoria St., London, S. W., England. 



54 




JEFFERSON AS BOB ACRES. 



THE-. 



/T\ail apd Express 



•JV^fj^iV* 



PUBLISHES THE 



NEWS 



-PROM " 



:g4p§ : Iwpikn about Expiring, 

F0R TWO CENTS! 



SATURDAY, 7 o [COLUMNS, THREE CENTS. 



J^F your Newsdealer cannot • gUg m a j| 3^ FxpfeSS, 

supply you, send us a ' t I ' ^ I 7 
postal card stating; this • 1 

fact. ....... 23 PARK ROW. 



56 




MARIE BURROUGHS. 



United States Express Company. 



Best Domestic and Foreign Express 
Service between New York 



and All Parts of the World. 



Special oT^ttention given to 

IKew X^Qrk and Suburban. 
Transportation. : : 



SEND MONEY 
BY 



United States Express Money Orders. 



CHEAPEST, SAFEST, MOST CONVENIENT. 



United States Express Co.'s Foreign Department. 

Transportation between the United States, Europe and all Foreign Countries, by fast steamers 
and direct railway lines. 

Agencies in London, Liverpool, Paris, Havre and principal European and Foreign Countries. 

Under authority from and designated by the United States Government as a bonded line. 

Merchandise, Passengers' Baggage, etc., transported in bond, without examination, to nearest 
inland Port of Entry. 

United States Express Co. Offices in New York. 

Principal Office, No. 49 BROADWAY. 



946 Broadway, 
1313 Broadway, 
296 Canal Street, 
16 West 4th Street, 
142 West Street, 
8 Reade Street, 



333 Washington Street, 
730 Fulton Street, 



66 Montgomery Street, 



BRANCH OFFICES. 

• Stand No. 15, West Washington 

Market, 
11 East 14th Street, 
875 Sixth Avenue, 
342 Third Avenue, 
72 West 125th St. (Harlem), 

BROOKLYN. 

17 & 19 Bergen Street, 
398 Bedford Avenue, 

JERSEY CITY. 
35 Ocean Avenue, 

HOBOKEN. 



251 West 135th St. (Harlem), 
695 Columbus (9th) Ave., bet. 

93d and 94th Sts., 
Foot Christopher Street, 
Foot Whitehall Street, 
Foot Liberty Street. 



1063 Bedford Avenue. 



Office and Depot C. R. R. of N. J. 



Office and Depots, Ferry St. (Near D., L. & W. Passenger Depot), 
Passenger Depot D., L. & W. R. R. Co. 



Application to any of the above-named offices for Wagon Service. Rates, or any further informa- 
tion will receive prompt attention. 



T. C. 



% I^res't. 



C T. THAYER, Gen'l Agt. 



58 



5he eftctors' -Fund of eftmerica. 



1891-92. 



PRESIDENT. 

Albert M. Palmer. 



FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT. 

Louis Aldrich. 



second vice-president. 

Edwin Knowles. 



TREASURER. 

Frank W. Sanger. 



SECRETARY. 

Chas. W. Thomas. 



COUNSEL. 

Hon. A. J. Dittenhoefer. 



BOARD OF TRUSTEES. 



Albert M. Palmer, 
Edwin Knowles, 

Charles W. Thomas, 
Joseph W. Shannon, 
De Wolf Hopper, 
Edwin H. Price, 
M. W. Hanley, 

Augustus Pitou, 



Louis Aldrich, 

Frank W. Sanger, 

Joseph F. Wheelock, 
F. F. Mackay, 

Daniel Frohman, 
Antonio Pastor, 
Al. Hayman, 
H. S. Taylor, 



Rudolph Aronson. 



Antonio Pastor, 
Edwin Knowles, 



EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. 
Louis Aldrich, Chairman. 

OFFICE STAFF. 



Lester S. Gurney, 
John Mathews, 
Vincent Kearney, 



F. F. Mackay, 
J. W. Shannon, 



Assistant Secretary. 

Visiting Agent. 

Clerk. 



59 



THE' 



Bank of New Amsterdam, 

OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK. 

BROADWAY AND 39th STREET. 



THOMAS C. ACTON, President. FRANK TILFORD, Vice-President. 

NELSON J. H. EDGE, Cashier. 



Capital, $250,000.00. 



Surplus, $110,000.00. 



«-*=s DIRECTORS. 



John A. Stewart, 
Jas. A. Roosevelt, 
Sam'l D. Baecock, 
Thos. Denny, 



G. G. Haven, 
John T. Terry, 
F. D. Tappen, 
Thos. C. Acton, 



Frank Tilford, 
G. H. Scribner, 
Frank Curtiss, 
Jno. S. Barnes, 



Jesse Seligman, 
Jno. L. Riker, 
Rich'd V. Lewis, 
Geo. W. Loss, 



Elihu Root. 



ft" PRUDENTIAL" PRESS 



-MANUFACTURED by- 



€R. HOE & COB 




• # # 

Q\ y rE manufacture Presses of al- 
y y most every description, and of 
any size, printing from the smallest 
theatrical hand-bills up to the largest 
newspapers, maps in colors, etc. 
Send for Illustrated Catalogue. 



R. HOE & CO., 504 Grand St., New York. 



60 



ice'&o o£ -tne q&.ciiv flxccutiue So m mitten. 



Mrs. A. M. Palmer, President. 

Mrs. Edward E. Kidder, ist V.-Pres. 

Mrs. A. C. Van Brunt, 2d V.-Pres. 



Miss Georgia Cayvan, Sec. 
Miss Emma Frohman, Cor. Sec 
Miss Alice Fischer, Rec. Sec. 



foment ©ocecu-ti/ue ai/tb §oi4M4<fU4ia ^owntil'tcc. 



Mrs. Agnes Booth. 

Mrs. Minnie Maddern Fiske. 

Mrs. Agnes Ethel Rouderbush. 
Mme. Modjeska. 

Mrs. J. C. Croly. 

Mrs. E. M. Knox. 
Miss Sydney Armstrong. 
Miss Maida Craigen. 
Miss Rosa Rand. 
Miss Maude Harrison. 
Miss Estelle Clayton. 

Miss Isabelle Evesson. 
Mrs. Edwin Knowles. 
Mrs. Jacob Hess. 

Miss Martha Morton. 
Mrs. Frank Leslie Wilde. 

Mrs. Annie Robe Griswold. 
Mrs. Helen P. Gurney. 
Mrs. Edward Harrigan. 
Mrs. Ettie Henderson. 

Mrs. Kate Claxton-Stevenson. 
Miss Marie Burroughs. 
Miss Marie Hilforde. 
Mrs. Lyman Fiske. 

Mrs. John A. Cockerill. 
Mrs. D. P. Bowers. 

Mrs. E. L. Fernandez. 

Miss Dora Goldthwaite. 
Mrs. C. A. Doremus. 



Mrs. Kendal. 

Mrs. VV. J. Florence. 

Mrs. Barney Williams. 
Mrs. Rachel McAuley. 

Dr. Elizabeth Johnson. 
Miss Bertha Welby. 
Miss Lotta Crabtree. 

Mrs. John D. Townsend. 
Mrs. J. Neilson Stout. 
Mrs. Frank Mayo. 

Mrs. Louisa Eldridge. 
Miss Kate Mayhew. 
Mrs. Edith Kingdon Gould. 
Miss Effie Shannon. 
Miss Annie Pixley. 
Miss Ella Starr. 

Mrs. F. Stiebel. 

Mrs. Florence C. Ives. 
Miss May Robson. 
Miss Emily Rigl. 

Mrs. Wm. J. Henderson. 
Mrs. Lester Wallack. 

Mrs. McKee Rankin. 

Miss Gabrielle Du Sauld. 
Mrs. Matt Morgan. 
Mrs. Clark Bell. 

Mrs. Samuel G. Courteney. 
Mrs. Bijou Heron Miller. 



ci 



HARRIGAN'S THEATRE. 

35tli Street and Sixth Avenue. 

M. W. H ANLEY Manager 

^EIIiIiY i^P T^E 400. 



OVERTURE— Reilly and the 400 

PEOPLE OF 

WILY REILLY 

Salvator Magnus Mr. John Wild 

Lizzie Calhoun Mr. Jos. Sparks 

Commodore Toby Tow Mr. James B. Radcliffe 

Herman Smeltz Mr. Harry Fisher 

Jeems Jajjers Mr. Geo. Merritt 

Ned Reilly Mr. Charles Coffey 

Percy Oggles Mr. Fred. Peters 

Hippolite Duval Mr. Richard Quilter 

Valentine McClinchy Mr. Dan Burke 

Bessie Bowlow Mr. John Decker 

That's What Mr. James Burke 

Jimmy the Con Mr. William West 

Roundsman Moran Mr. James McCullough 

Iceman Mr. James Rennie 

Butcher Mr. Willis Pickert 



.Mr. Dave Braham 
the play : 
Mr. EDWARD HARRIGAN 

James McGouldrick Mr. John Walsh 

Dionysius Dorrigan Mr. Chas. Sturges 

Slattery Mr. John Mayon 

Ignatius McCune Mr. Edward Gorman 

August Shutzer Mr. Jos. Williamson 

Corporal Jimmy Mr. Ed. Murphy 

Fireman Mr. Joseph Healy 

Hyram Doolittle Mr. George Secor 

Emil Shutzer Master Tony 

Lavine Gale Miss Hattie Moore 

Emiline Gale M iss Evelyn Pollock 

Maggie Murphy Miss Emma Pollock 

Kittie Lynch Miss Ada Lewis 

Miss Murray Hill 

Miss Van Tassel Miss Fannie Batchelder 



Maryann Dooley Mrs. Annie Yeamans 

Guests Miss Josie Knight, Miss Margery Teel, Miss Buckley, Miss St. Clair, Miss Edwards 



A ndrews-Demarest 
Seating Co. 



108 East 16U1 Street, 

New York City, 

is the consolidation of 



C B. Demarest & Co. 



and the Seating Department of 



Andrews Mfg. Co. 



Seating for Opera Houses, Churches, 
Halls, Lodge Rooms, &c. 



7Vlore people Qie 

from accidents than from almost 
any one form of disease. 



THE UNITED STATES MUTUAL 
ACCIDENT ASSOCIATION 

gives the best accident policy. You 
can secure $5,000 insurance with 
liberal indemnities at a cost of only 
$15 a year, or $4 quarterly, exclus- 
ive of $5 policy fee. This associa- 
tion has more insurance in force 
than any other. .... 

CHARLES B. PEET, President, 

JAMES R. PITCHER, Sec'y & Gen'l Manager. 

320, 322 and 324 Broadway 

NEW YORK. 



62 



QVovmns §>occcukiv<2> (Bom mi t tee anb Qckivz ^^ox/ko/c$. 



Mrs. Rudolph Aronson. 
Mrs. A. Adams. 
Miss Laura Alberta. 
Miss Julia Arthur 
Mrs. D. C. Anderson. 
Mrs. Finlay Anderson. 
Mrs. Eleanor Kirk Ames. 
Miss Viola Allen. 
Miss Sybil St. Albans. 
Miss Ramon Briscoe. 
Mrs. Dr. J. Baran. 
Mrs. Mortimer Brown. 
Mrs. J. Alex Brown. 
Mrs. Chas. Barnard. 
Mrs. J. C. Buckstone 
Mrs. Martha Beckel. 
Miss Burgoyne. 
Miss Fannie Batchelder. 
Miss Boyesen. 
Mrs. Wm. Burke. 
Miss Etta Braham. 
Miss Ellen Burg. 
Miss Madge Baron. 
Mrs. A. A. Cowles. 
Miss Maude Chilton. 
Miss Mary Comstock. 
Mrs. Richard Croker. 
Miss Mary Croxton. 
Mrs. J. I. C. Clark. 
Miss Attalie Claire. 
Miss Mildred Conway. 
Mrs. Herman Curiel. 
Mrs. Eugene Clark. 
Miss Marie Carlyle. 
Miss Olive Chamberlain. 
Mrs. Haryot Holt Cahoon. 
Mrs. John Chamberlain. 
Mrs. Clemenceau Dodge. 
Mrs. C. D. Doubleday. 
Mrs. Henry Dazian. 
Mrs. A. M. Dickenson. 
Miss Ada Dyas. 
Miss Grace Denton. 
Miss Juliet Durand. 
Mrs. E. A. Eberle. 
Mrs. Harrv Edwards. 



Mrs. A. M. B. Ellis. Mrs. 

Mrs. Ferdinand P. Earle. Miss 
Mrs. Dr. Walter M. Fleming. Miss 

Mrs. A. D. Faxon. Mrs. 

Miss Bijou Fernandez Miss 

Mrs. Joseph Frankau. Mrs. 

Mrs. Lucy F. French. Miss 

Miss Kate Field. Mrs. 

Miss Kathryn Florence. Miss 

Mrs. Egbert Guernsey. Mrs. 

Mrs. Thomas F. Gilroy. Miss 

Dr. Gillespie. Miss 

Mrs. Chas. A Gerlach. Mrs. 

Mrs. Berlan Gibbs. Miss 

Miss C. Garson. Mrs. 

Mrs. A. C. Garsia. Miss 

Miss Ada Gilman. Mrs. 

Mrs. E. B. Harvier. Mrs. 

Mrs. Al. Hayman. Mrs. 

Mrs. E. M. Holland. Miss 

Mrs. H. Hermann. Mrs. 

Mrs. Gus Heckler. Miss 

Mrs. Haswell. Miss 

Miss Rachel Hayman. Mrs. 

Miss Alice E. Ives. Mrs. 

Miss E. J. Jordan. Miss 

Miss Kate Jordan. Mrs. 

Miss Josie Knight. Mrs. 

Mrs. Julia Kitchen. Mrs. 

Mrs. J. W. Keller. Mrs. 

Miss Amy Lee. Mrs. 

Mrs. Julia Linthicum. Miss 

Miss Ada Lewis. Miss 

Miss Minnie Lewis. Miss 

Miss Irene Leslie. Miss 

Mrs. E. H. Low. Mrs. 

Fraulein Litthner. Mrs. 

Miss Livein. Miss 

Miss Rose Levy. Mrs. 

Miss Paola Loewe. Mrs. 

Mrs. Ed. F. Mayo. Mrs. 

Miss Flattie Moore. Miss 

Mrs. Frank Mordaunt. Miss 

Mrs. J. W. Morrissy. Miss 

Mrs. Frank B. Murtha. Mrs. 

Miss Eleanore Mayo. Mrs. 



A. McKinstry. 
Ethel Marlowe. 
Dickie Martinez. 
Thomas Maddock. 
Helene Brooks Mestayer. 
J. H. Meade. 
Morgan. 

Clarence W. Meade. 
Elita Proctor Otis. 
Tony Pastor. 
Mary Penfield. 
Emma Pollock. 
G. W. Pach. 
May Elliott Page. 
Cecile Rush. 
Ray Rockman. 
Ravenhill. 
Carl Rosenfeld. 
Theo. Rosenfeld. 
Phyllis Rankin. 
Redlich. 
Annie Russell. 
Marguerite St. John. 
W. J. Swan. 
Jos. Schmidt. 
Stevens. 
St. Clair Smith. 
A. H. Sheldon. 
Ralph Trautman. 
Geo. W. Turner. 
F. B. Thurber. 
Daisy Temple. 
Helen Tracy- 
Bessie Tyree. 
Marjorie Teal. 
E. S. Tupper. 
E. L. Thropp. 
Lilly Vinton. 
Francis Wilson. 
Thomas Whiffen. 
Louise P. Warner. 
Minnie Wheeler. 
Blanche Weaver. 
Viola Whitcomb. 
Adele C. Warner. 
Antonio Zetelle. 



63 



HOYT'S = THEATRE 



-24th STREET, NEAR BROADWAY. 



HOYT & THOMAS, -------- Sole Managers. 



>=sgh Presenting ^s= 



Season of 1893 and 1894 



( i 



( ( 



A TEMPERANCE TOWN 



T ) ) 



Season of 1892 and 1893 



A TRIP TO CHINATOWN 



)) 



WHICH IS ENJOYING THE LONGEST RUN EVER KNOWN TO FARCE COMEDY, 
AND FAST APPROACHING ITS 20()th Performance. 



The Latest and Best. 




Qarniva 

3traight Qut 
Qigarettes. 



[Anti-Trust.] 

64 



CORRESPONDING SECRETARIES. 

H. A. McGlenen, Boston Theatre, . . Boston, Mass., and New England 

J. Fred Zimmerman, Chestnut St. O. H., Philadelphia, Pa. 

T. F. Kelley, National Theatre, ..... u 

M. J. Pickering, 209 Market St., .... 

Joseph R. Grismer, "The Alcazar," .... San Francisco, Cal. 

Alfred Bouvier, Baldwin Theatre, ... " 

Will J. Davis, The Haymarket, ..... Chicago, Ills. 

P. Short, Olympic Theatre, . . . . . .St. Louis, Mo. 

John Albaugh, Albaugh's Theatre, .... Washington, D. C. 

H. Greenwall, Grand Opera House, .... New Orleans, La. 

John Meech, Academy of Music, ..... Buffalo, N. Y. 

Al Thayer, Cincinnati Enquirer, .... Cincinnati, Ohio 

Gus. Hartz, Euclid Avenue Opera House. .... Cleveland, Ohio 

J. F. Conklin, Grand Opera House, . . Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn. 

Jacob Litt, Academy of Music, ..... Milwaukee, Wis. 

Frank Gray, New Memphis Theatre, .... Memphis, Tenn. 

H. Greenwall, ........ Galveston, Texas 

H. G. Berger, Mozart Academy of Music, . . . Richmond, Va. 

HONORARY MEMBERS. 

Grover Cleveland, James Gordon Bennett, W. S. Andrews, William R. Grace, 
Chauncey M. Depew, Robert G. Ingersoll, A. J. Dittenhoefer, *Wm. T. Sherman, 
Daniel E. Sickles, Rev. G. H. Houghton, D. D., Abram S. Hewitt, William Winter, 
Daniel Dougherty, Adolph L. Sanger, Robert Nooney, Theodore E. Roessle, Antonio 
E. Terry, Horace Porter. 

LIFE MEMBERS. 

Louis Aldrich, Joseph Arthur, *David Bidvvell, Edwin Booth, *Lawrence 
Barrett, George A. Beane, Kate Byron, Theodore Bromley, Andrew Boyd, *Samuel 
Colville, Mrs. Samuel Colville, Lotta M. Crabtree, Benoit Constant Coquelin, James 
L. Carhart, Kate Claxton, Henry Dazian, Juliet Durand, *J. K. Emmet, T. H. French, 
*Israel Fleischman, *William J. Florence, Robert Fulford, Daniel Frohman, John A. 
Forepaugh, Edward Harrigan, *William Henderson, Richard M. Hooley, Martin W. 
Hanley, Al. Hayman, Edward J. Hassan, Gus Hartz, Frank E. Henderson, Charles 
H. Hoyt, Henry Irving, Henry A. Jones, H. R. Jacobs, Thomas W. Keene, Edwin 
Knowles, Gertrude Kellogg, Jennie Kimball, Lillian Langtry, *Rosa M. Leland, Rose 
Levere, Henry C. Miner, Marshall H. Mallory, Theodore Moss, Charles Meyer, 
William H. Morton, Maggie Mitchell, Robert B. Mantel], J. H. McVicker, John 
Moller, Albert M. Palmer, Charles P. Palmer, Annie Pixley, Cora Urquhart Potter, 
Antonio Pastor, William W. Randall, Rhea, J. Wesley Rosenquest, A. A. Stewart, 
Agnes Booth Schoeffel, Edmund C. Stanton, Frank W. Sanger, Edward H. Sothern, 
William E. Sinn, Cordelia R. Sanford, Eugene Tompkins, Charles H. Thompson, 
Denman Thompson, Charles W. Thomas, Sidney Woollett, N. S. Wood. 

♦Deceased. 
65 



A. J. DITTENHOEFER, 



COUNSEL TO THE 



Actors' Fund of America, 

SGHERMERHORN BtflLDING, 

96 BROADWAY, 

New York City. 



(MO 1 



A. J. DITTENHOEFER, 

DAVID CERBER, y DITTENHOEFER, CERBER & JAMES. 

IRVING 

CHAR 



G M. DITTENHOEFER, I 

les F. James, ) 



PHYSICIANS TO THE ACTORS' FUND. 



Dr. Colin McDougall, 

Dr. J. Baran, 

Dr. Louis W. Schultze, 

Dr. Thomas Brennan, 

Dr. Ludger C. Vincent, 

Dr. E. F. Hoyt, 

Dr. Philip F. O'Hanlon, 

Dr. Charles O. Moak, 

Dr. H. B. Pettingill, 

Dr. Walter M. Fleming, 



NEW YORK. 

104 West 40th Street 

223 East 72c! Street 

228 West i32d Street 

155 East 2 2d Street 

(Surgeon Eye, Ear and Throat,) 52 West 26th Street 

36 West 27 th Street 

321 East 20th Street 

2436 Second Avenue 

123 West 39th Street 

240 Fifth Avenue 



OTHER CITIES. 



Dr. A. Ross Matherson, 
Dr. James W. Fleming, 
Dr. L. Safford Gillespie, 
Dr. Christopher Lott, 
Dr. J. S. Shaw, 
Dr. Arthur B. Hosmer, 
Dr. H. Pomeroy, 
Dr. Hamilton E. Leach, 
Dr. L. A. Querner, 
Dr. I. Newton Jones, 
Dr. Thomas Latimer, 
Dr. John Lochner, 
Dr. William E. Ashton, 
Dr. P. S. Donnellan, 
Dr. Henry H. Hart, 
Dr. M. Levy, 
Dr. G. F. Comstock, 
Dr. G. E. Lochner, 
Dr. W. F. Morrow, 
Dr. A. N. Shotwell, 
Dr. T. A. Hughes, 
Dr. Frank McDonald, 
Dr. J. W. Heustis, 
Dr. William O'Gorman, 
Dr. \V. M. Lewis, 



337 Union Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

379 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

. 132 South 8th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

124 Reid Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

577 Tremont Street, Boston, Mass. 

70 Monroe Street, Room 16, Chicago, 111. 

526 Prospect Street, Cleveland, O. 

. 716 13th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. 

412 Race Street, Cincinnati, O. 

N. E. Cor. 9th and Elm Streets, Cincinnati, O. 

103 West Monument Street, Baltimore, Md. 

383 Jersey Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 

338 South 15th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

1 1 22 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

939 Howard Street, San Francisco, Cal. 

112 Canal Street, New Orleans, La. 

540 Broadway, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. 

1 South Hawk Street, Albany, NT. Y. 

Times Building, Kansas City, Mo. 

Mount Clemens, Mich. 

730 16th Street, Denver, Col. 

424 Penn Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pa. 

Dubuque, Iowa. 

905 Broad Street, Newark. N. J. 

Cor. Third and Spring Streets, Los Angeles, Cal. 



6T 



Park & Tilford, 

Importers, Jobbers and Retailers, 
(INVITE attention to their Extensive Stocks of 

HIGH-CLASS GROCERIES, 

FOREIGN and DOMESTIC DELICACIES, 
CHOICE WINES, 

HA VAN A CIGARS and 

DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES. 

Their PERFUMERY Departments offer very attractive assortments from the 
leading European manufacturers of Fine Perfumeries and Toilet Requisites. 



SOLE AGENTS IN 7 HE UNITED ST A TES FOR 

The celebrated EA U DE COLOGNE of Johann Maria Farina, No. 4 Julich 
Place, Cologne f Rh. 

Roger 6- Gallet (Paris) EXTRACTS and SOAPS in all the favorite odors : Iris 
blanc, Heliotrope, Peau d'Espagne, Violette de Parme, &c. 

PARFUMERLE-0R1ZA of L. Lcgrand, Paris, embracing a large variety of 
superior EXTRACTS, SOAPS and TOILET PREPARATIONS, includ- 
ing the popular extract, '' Violette du Czar," and Perfumes in solidified 
form. 



017 & 919 BROADWAY, cor. 21st St. 

789 cV 701 FLFTH AVE., 5 & 7 E. 59th St. 

656, 658 & 660 SLXTH AVE., cor. 38th St. 

118, 120 cV 122 SLXTH AVE., near <pth St. 

NEW YORK. 



yistoiw of ttje J^ctoFs' purjd. 



TT7HE actual formation of the Fund dates from Monday, March 12, 1882, on which 
1" day a meeting of theatrical managers was held at the Union Square Theatre, 
fifteen places of amusement being represented. Soon after several benefits 
were given, the police aiding in the sale of tickets, and many large contributions 
were made, the largest being that of James Gordon Bennett, which was $10,000. 
On June 8, 1882, the Actors' Fund of America was legally incorporated, 57 
leading professionals being in the list of incorporators. The word profession was 
defined in the act of incorporation to include all who earn a living in connection 
with the theatre. 

Ten applications for aid were received at the first meeting of the temporary 
relief committee — a wardrobe woman, an acrobat, a manager, and a stage carpenter 
being among the applicants, which clearly illustrates that the intention of the found- 
ers of the Actors' Fund was to make its charities of the broadest possible kind. 

The first general meeting was held on Saturday, July 15th, and the following 
officers were elected : Lester Wallack, president; A. M. Palmer, vice-president ; 
Theodore Moss, treasurer; and Daniel Frohman, secretary. The trustees for the 
first year were as follows: Lester Wallack, Albert M. Palmer, Edwin Booth, 
Edward Harrigan, Henry E. Abbey, William Birch, William Henderson, Joseph 
Jefferson, John F. Poole, Marshall H. Mallory, Phineas T. Barnum, Lawrence Bar- 
rett, William J. Florence, Joseph K. Emmet, Harry Miner, John H. Haverly, and 
William E. Sinn. 

One of the earliest provisions made by the trustees was for the burial of 
destitute actors. Quarters were generously given to the Fund this year by Harri- 
gan & Hart, in the Theatre Comique, opposite the New York Hotel, on Broadway. 

The benefit on April 12th, 1883, netted a considerable sum, the police aiding 
in the sale of tickets. 

Thus the Actors' Fund received through these large contributions and 
benefits its first great impetus in an excellent showing of cash assets. 

On June 8th, 1883, a second annual meeting was held at Wallack's Theatre, 
the reports showing that the total receipts from March 12, 1882, up to this date, 
were $57,392. Burials and the care of the sick had called for the expenditure of 
$12,349 ; nearly 200 professionals had received relief and 22 had been buried. The 



T!l^ New York Dramatic fiirror 



IS THE RECOGNIZED 
JOURNAL OF THE 
THEATRICAL PROFESSION. 






Its Criticisms, Editorials, Comments and News are written by experts. 

As a bright, wholesome, comprehensive, enterprising stage news- 
paper The Mirror is a necessity to every member of the Dramatic Profes- 
sion and to every playgoer that desires to keep informed on all subjects 
relating to the theatre. 






PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY 

Price 10 cents, at all News Stands. 
Subscription $4.00 a year. 



Publication Office, 1432 Broadway, 

(Opposite Metropolitan Opera House.) 



OFFICE AND SHOW ROOMS : 

250 and 252 FULTON STREET, BROOKLYN. 



Arnold & Logke, 

WARD TIDDEN. 

01a$ Stained Decorator^. 



EDWARD S. ARNOLD. ALEX. S. LOCKE. EDWARD TIDDEN. 



Designs with estimates submitted for 
all manner of Decorative Work. 



The New Fifth Avenue Theatre, 
Harrigan's Theatre, . 
Columbia Theatre, 
Academy of Music, 



Among the Theatres decorated by us are the following : 

New York. I Park Theatre, .... 
New York. Holmes' Star Theatre, 

Brooklyn, i Gilmore's Court Square Theatre, 
Brooklyn. | Music Hall, .... 



Brooklyn. 

Brooklyn. 

Springfield, Mass. 

Middletown, Conn. 



GOMMaNIPAti GOAL G9. 



DEALERS IN 

Lehigh and \A/ilkes-Barre Coal Co.'; 



eoAL 



Neto Yoi^ Offices : 



1 11 BROADWAY,- 



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YARD: Communipau, Jersey City. 

YARD: 617 to 621 Eleventh Ave, New York. 

PIER: Communipau, Jersey City. 

TELEPHONE: 
DOWN-TOWN, 1751 Cortlandt. 

UP-TOWN : 656 38th Street. 



Manufacturers, Steam Users and Families Supplied from Yards. 

Steamboats and Tugs supplied from Pier. 



70 



balance was $43,249, with $25,545 of the amount invested in United States bonds. 
The officers were re-elected. A committee was appointed to secure a burial plot, 
and the trustees were given wide power in matters of relief. 

The season of i883-'84 was not a prosperous one for the Fund. The experi- 
ment of a series of simultaneous benefits, all given on April 17th, 1884, brought in but 
a small sum, and the report at the annual meeting, June 3, was discouraging. 
The entire benefits had only brought in $7,913 ; the disbursements, $13,787. Forty- 
two professionals had been buried, and 168 relieved. The following officers were 
elected : H. C. Miner, president ; William Henderson, first vice-president ; William 
E. Sinn, second vice-president ; Samuel Colville, treasurer; and Harry Edwards, 
secretary. Mr. Benjamin A. Baker was engaged by the trustees as assistant secre- 
tary. 

On December 23d the Theatre Comique was burned, and many of the 
papers of the Fund destroyed. The offices were then established at No. 12 Union 
Square. 

The efforts of the trustees, and counsel of the Fund, in the meanwhile 
secured a great and considerable advantage in the passage of an amendment by 
the Legislature of the State to the Theatrical License law. Before this the tax paid 
by the theatres had gone to the Society for the Reformation of Juvenile Delin- 
quents. Since then the distribution of the sum has included a part for the Actors' 
Fund. 

On June 2, 1885, the fourth annual meeting was held. The reports showed 
that the year's receipts had been $14,115; expenditures, $10,617; also that 51 
professionals had been buried, and 234 cared for in sickness. The following officers 
and trustees were elected : A. M. Palmer, president; William E. Sinn, first vice- 
president; John F. Poole, second vice-president; Samuel Colville, treasurer; Harrison 
Gray Fiske, secretary ; trustees, A. M. Palmer, William E. Sinn, John F. Poole, 
Samuel Colville, H. C. Miner, William Henderson, Arthur Wallack, M. H. Mallory, 
James W. Collier, Edward Aronson, Antonio Pastor, Edwin Knowles, J. M. Hill, 
Eugene Tompkins, I. Fleischman, Samuel Fort, and John P. Smith. 

On June 8th, 1886, the fifth annual meeting was held. The year's receipts 
were $17,450 ; disbursements, $19,901 ; and 59 professionals had been buried and 289 
relieved. The burial plots in the Cemetery of the Evergreens had been purchased, 
for which $3,600 were paid. The following officers and trustees were elected : 
A. M. Palmer, president ; William E. Sinn, first vice-president ; John F. Poole, second 
vice-president ; Samuel Colville, treasurer ; Harrison Gray Fiske, secretary ; 
trustees, A. M. Palmer, H. C. Miner, Samuel Colville, William Henderson, John F. 
Poole, M. H. Mallory, Edward Aronson, Antonio Pastor, T. H. French, E. G. 
Gilmore, R. E. J. Miles, I. Fleischman, Eugene Tompkins, Edwin Knowles, R. M. 
Hooley, John P. Smith, and Harry Watkins. The next fiscal year — 1886-87 — was 
in every way prosperous. Mile. Morlachi, the danseuse, gave by her will the first 
legacy ever left to the Fund — which added to its treasury $1,100.63. 



IT LEADS THEM ALL . 

The Mutual Life 
Insurance Company 

of New York. 

RICHARD A. Mc CURDY, President. 



ASSETS OVER $159,000,0 00 



The Consol Policy recently announced by The Mutual Life Insurance 
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an} r Investment Insurance Contract ever offered. It consolidates 

INSURANCE, INVESTMENT, 

ENDOWMENT, ANNUAL INCOME. 

No other Company offers this policy. Apply only to Company's nearest 
Agent for details. 



THE MUTUAL LIFE paid to $19,000,000 

its policy holders in 1891, nearly 

The Mutual has ever been in the minds of the discriminating public 
" The Greatest of all the Companies " 



The sixth annual meeting was held on June 7th, 1887. The receipts for the 
year were $27,524.26, and the expenditures $17,057.31 ; and 44 professionals were 
buried and 217 relieved. The following officers and trustees were elected: A. M. 
Palmer, president ; H. C. Miner, first vice-president ; William Henderson, second 
vice-president ; T. Henry French, treasurer ; Harrison Gray Fiske, secretary ; 
trustees, A. M. Palmer, H. C. Miner, William Henderson, William E. Sinn, T. Henry 
French, Harry Edwards, John W. Albaugh, Marshall H. Mallory, Eugene Tompkins, 
Edward Aronson, Antonio Pastor, Edwin Knowles, E. G. Gilmore, Louis Aldrich, 
I. Fleischman, John P. Smith, Harry Watkins. 

The seventh annual meeting was held on June 5th, 1888. The receipts for 
the year were $25,318.73 ; expenditures, $25,580.98. Additional ground had been 
purchased in the cemetery — 49 professionals were buried and 276 relieved. The 
following officers and trustees were elected : A. M. Palmer, president ; H. C. Miner, 
first vice-president ; William Henderson, second vice-president ; T. H. French, 
treasurer ; Harrison Gray Fiske, secretary ; trustees, A. M. Palmer, H. C. Miner, 
William Henderson, William E. Sinn, T. Henry French, Harry Edwards, John W. 
Albaugh, Marshall H. Mallory, Eugene Tompkins, Edward Aronson, Antonio 
Pastor, Edwin Knowles. E. G. Gilmore, Louis Aldrich, I. Fleischman, John P. Smith, 
Harry Watkins. 

The eighth annual meeting was held on June 4th, 1889. The receipts for 
the year were $27,422.03 ; expenditures, $21,838.00 ; and 59 professionals were buried, 
and 324 were relieved. At this meeting several important changes were made in 
the personnel of the officers and board of trustees, and the following were elected : 
A. M. Palmer, president ; Louis Aldrich, first vice-president ; William Henderson, 
second vice-president ; Frank W. Sanger, treasurer ; Charles W. Thomas, secretary ; 
trustees, A. M. Palmer, Louis Aldrich, William Henderson, Frank W. Sanger, 
Charles Thomas, Joseph F. Wheelock, Joseph W. Shannon, F. F. Mackay, W. J. 
Florence, De Wolf Hopper, Harrison Gray Fiske, Edmund C. Stanton, Edwin H. 
Price, Edwin Knowles, Martin W. Hanley, Antonio Pastor, Joseph Arthur. 

The ninth annual meeting was held June 3d, 1890. The receipts of the year 
were $32,527.62 ; expenditures (including the payment of $5,005.48 piincipal and 
interest of mortgage of the burial plots), $30,521.55 ; and 55 professionals were 
buried, and 317 relieved. The following officers and trustees were elected : A. M. 
Palmer, president ; Louis Aldrich, first vice-president ; Edwin Knowles, second vice- 
president ; Frank W. Sanger, treasurer ; Charles W. Thomas, secretary ; trustees, 
A. M. Palmer, Louis Aldrich, Frank W. Sanger, Charles W. Thomas, Joseph W. 
Shannon, F. F. Mackay, W. J. Florence, De Wolf Hopper, Daniel Frohmam, Edmund 
C. Stanton, Edwin H. Price, Edwin Knowles, Martin W. Hanley, Antonio Pastor, 
Joseph Arthur, J. W. Rosenquest. 

The tenth annual meeting was held on June 2d, 1891 ; the receipts for the 
year were $31,884.22 ; the expenditures, $28,879.82. During this year the United 
States bonds had been sold for $32,737.50, and the money invested in bond and 



PROCTOR & GO., 

= = East India House, 



BET. BROADWAY AND 
FIFTH AVENUE, 






4 



% 



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'A 



'4 




Ne. 5 EAST 20fH St., NEW YORK. 



%> m 




<$ 



J* 



*$> 



^ 



& 



v<f 



& 



$y 



®^ IMPORTERS OF ^ 

Artistic Fabrics, 

Embroidered Hangings bh£ Tapestries, 

"Rugs, Furniture, Bric-a-"Brac, Etc. 



SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ARTISTIC 
FURNISHING AND INTERIOR DECORATIONS. 



74 



mortgage ; 66 professionals were buried, and 438 relieved. The following officers 
and trustees were elected : A. M. Palmer, president ; Louis Aldrich, first vice-presi- 
dent ; Edwin Knowles, second vice-president ; Frank W. Sanger, treasurer ; Chas. 
W. Thomas, secretary ; trustees, A. M. Palmer, Louis Aldrich, Edwin Knowles, 
Frank W. Sanger, Charles W. Thomas, Joseph W. Shannon, De Wolf Hopper, Edwin 
H. Price, M. W. Hanley, Augustus Pitou, Joseph F. Wheelock, F. F. Mackay, Daniel 
Frohman, Antonio Pastor, Al. Hayman, H. S. Taylor, Rudolph Aronson. 

The various incidents in the history of the Fund are set forth in its annual 
reports. These reports are made at the yearly meetings, and on these occasions 
addresses have been made by distinguished men — ex-President Cleveland, Senator 
Hill, Chauncey M. Depew, Gen. Sherman, Gen. Horace Porter, Robert G. Ingersoll, 
Edwin Booth, Lawrence Barrett, William Winter, Gen. Daniel E. Sickles, Daniel 
Dougherty, Dion Boucicault, Murat Halstead and others. The Fund now has com- 
modious quarters, with a reading room and a library, at 12 West 28th street. In 
the not distant future, it is hoped, it will be able to build its own house. To recount 
the incidents connected with the Fund, to speak of the care it has given to the hum- 
blest as well as to the most distinguished unfortunates, would be only to tell of what 
is in the very nature of its work. President Palmer in his last report, iSpo-'cji, thus 
summarizes what has been done : 

" T feel it my duty to recapitulate to you each year the character and the 
amount of work we have accomplished since the beginning. In the nine years cov- 
ered by the operations of the Fund we have expended for relief, burials, medicines, 
hospital charges, and burial plots, etc., the sum of $156,314.42. 

The number of people to whom in these years we have afforded relief, with- 
out which they would have either had to suffer utter destitution or to become public 
charges, is 2,571. We have given decent and proper burial during this time to 509 
unfortunate professionals. 

The secretary's report for the year shows that the number of persons to 
whom relief has been extended is 438, an increase of nearly 40 per cent, over the 
number reported last year. 

I wish to call attention once more in this connection to a fact which, in the 
estimate of our work formed by the public, is somewhat overlooked, and that is the 
absolutely broad scope of our charities. The poor singer or dancer of the music 
hall or dime museum can turn to this Fund, in the hour of sickness and distress, 
with as much certainty of assistance and relief as would the well-known actor or 
actress of the regular theatres. Some good people have urged upon us that this is 
a mistake, and that the benefactions of the Actors' Fund should be restricted to 
those who come legitimately under the designation of actor or actress. But we are 
convinced, after nine years' experience, that the broad and liberal policy established 
at the foundation of the Fund, and pursued without deviation up to this time, is by 
far the best, not only in that it brings great good to a large number of needy per- 
sons who without its help would be utterly destitute, but also in that the Associa- 

75 



ESTAB L I S-H ED 1840. 



C/ ompliments of 



J 



ackson Architectural 



ron Works. 



Foundries and Shops: 
East 28th St 29th Streets. 

Office : 
315 East 2Sth Street. 



/New LJork. 



^The Edison Electric Illuminating Co. of New York .^- 



General Offices: 






PEARh, • C0R. ■ EL2M • STREET. 



<T 



RC AN D 



INC ANDESCENT 



^r. 



IGHTTNG. 



Electric current for power to operate machinery of any description. Economical, clean, 
healthy. Supplying the principal Churches, Theatres, Factories, Mercantile Houses and Private 
Residences. Light steady ; supply constant. 

Proposals for installation of any magnitude submitted. 

HIGHEST GRADE OF WORKMANSHIP. HIGHEST STANDARD OF APPARATUS. 

Applications received at General Offices, Pearl, cor. Elm Street. 

76 • 



tion, through the absolutely impartial, unrestricted and undiscriminating character 
of its charities, wins for itself the commendation, the kindly interest, and oftentimes 
the sincere and earnest friendship of thoughtful persons both inside and outside our 
profession who take the pains to inform themselves as to its methods and as to its 
work. Many so-called " charities " are so hampered by rules and restrictions that 
the work they set out to do is never more than half done, the moneys they profess 
to dispense in caarity are largely consumed in maintaining expensive staffs of 
officers, whose business seems to be not so much to care for the legitimate benefi- 
ciaries of their societies as it is to guard themselves against imposition. For one, I 
hope that it will always be the proud boast of our Association that it has never 
failed to help the needy, even though it has to confess that it has been sometimes 
imposed upon by the unworthy. 

The number of burials paid for by the Fund the past year is extraordinarily 
large, being in all 66. Of these, 57 were in New York and Brooklyn, 1 in Boston, 
2 in Chicago, 1 in Philadelphia, 1 in Baltimore, 1 in San Francisco, 1 in Spokane 
Falls, 1 in Hoboken, and 1 in Washington. 

During the year the number of physicians on the staff of the Fund has largely 
increased, the total number at the present time being 3:. Fourteen of these are 
located in New York and Brooklyn. The others are in Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, 
Washington, Cincinnati, Philadelphia, Jersey City, Baltimore, San Francisco, New 
Orleans, Saratoga Springs, Albany, KansasCity, Mount Clemens, Mich.; Pittsburgh, 
Denver and Dubuque. During the past year our physicians in the metropolis 
have made 1,942 visits to the sick people in our charge." 

The wonderful growth of the Fund will perhaps be best evidenced by a peru- 
sal of the following list of officials, physicians, corresponding secretaries, etc., who 
are devoting their time and attention to the proper distribution of the Fund's chari- 
ties, all of them, with the exception of the necessary clerical force in the office, 
volunteering their services. 



77 




<& 



HE LEADING JOURNAL OF ITS CLASS. 



THE records which had been twenty-five years 
in accumulating in the office of Wm. T. 
Porter were purchased as a plant for the Turf, 
Field and Farm, and the now popular journal 
was established in 1865. It is the organ of the 
great breeding interest. Its office is the place 
where thoroughbred horses are registered, and 
where the trotting and pacing records are com- 
piled and published. * * * * It estab- 
lished Bench Shows, Field Trials and Gun Trials 
in America. The champions have signed articles 
of agreement for great matches in the office of 
the Turf, Field and Farm. The paper is a live 
one, sparing no pains to collect the freshest in- 
formation. It also is fearless in discussion. 
Being vigorous in the expression of intelligent 
thought, its views are widely quoted in America 
and Europe. It is the cheapest and best publica- 
tion of its class in our land, if not in the world. — 
News Company Trade Bulletin. 

NONE TO COMPARE. 

For a paper combining so much that is 
practical there is no publication to compare with 
Turf, Field and Farm, published in New York. 
It is edited with the utmost care in all its depart- 
ments, and there is not a single number which 
would not amply pay the cost of a year's sub 
scription to those interested in the subjects 
treated. — New England Reform Standard. 

APPOINTMENTS UNSURPASSED. 

The Turf, Field and Farm in its new and 
commodious quarters, 42-54 Times Building, 
have the best equipped and finest appointed 
offices of any similar publication in New York, if 
not in the country. * * * It has a very 



large circulation among the better class of those 
interested in the dog and horse, and it gives its 
readers more and better information for the 
money than can be found in any other journal. 
In fact, it gives so much exclusive news that 
"you ain't in it" if you don't read the Turf, 
Field and Farm every week. — Metropolitan and 
Rural Home, New York. 

THE NEWS, AND ABLY EDITED. 

The Turf, Field and Farm has introduced 
a new department, which is a great improve- 
ment in that already newsy paper. * * * 
The readers call for and get the paper which has 
the largest amount of reliable news. — The 
Graphic, Rushville, Ind. 

MARKED SUPERIORITY. 

"The kennel department of Turf, Field 
and Farm is always fresh and breezy — like all 
others in that highly excellent journal. In the 
twenty-six years that have elapsed since the 
appearance of its initial issue it has won a host 
of friends ; and it holds them as they were 
gained — by its marked superiority over publica- 
tions of its class." — Sports a field. 

CHARACTER AND NUMBERS. 

I advertised in Turf, Field and Farm Nov. 
13, and have received many inquiries and 
business ; it was not the number of inquiries that 
pleased me so much as the character of them. 
They were ail from men who meant just what 
they were writing about. And it is a great satis- 
faction to answer a letter of that nature. — 
G. 0. S., Wheeling, W. Va. 



Ask your Newsdealer to 
order TURF, FIELD AND 
FARM, and send for Cat- 
alogue of Books. 



Turf, Field and Farm (Association, 

42-54 Times Building, New York. 

78 



TO OUR PATRONS 



J 



The greatest of all dramatists has said that "one touch of nature 
makes the whole world kin." There is no appeal to humanity which is 
responded to with more glad good will and with more practical benev- 
olence than the cause of charity. At the same time the obligations that 
mankind oiues to its fellows in this respect are purely voluntary. It is 
for this reason that the members of the Committee of the Actors' Fund 
Fair feel a supreme sense of gratitude to the many who have come 
forward so nobly and so generously in behalf of the Actors' Fund 
of A merica. They desire to especially express their deepest gratitude to 
the business men of the community for their gifts to the Fair, and to 
the advertisers who have so generously contributed their share toward 
the financial success of this "Souvenir of the Actors Ftcnd." 



■ A. M. Palmer, 
H. C. Miner, 
Al. Hayman, 
Edwin Knowles, 
Louis Aldrich, 
Frank W. Sanger, 
Chas. W. Thomas, 
Danl. Frohman, 



\ 



/ 



Committee. 



79 




AS I NO, • 






BROADWAg & 39th STREET. 



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ROD0LPH AR0NS0N, H evenings at a is. 

Manager. \f MATINEE SATURDAY~AT 2. 



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THE LATEST NOVELTIES AND SUC- 
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THE CASINO. 




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MANHATTAN TRUST COMPANY BUILDING, COR. WALL AND NASSAU STREETS, NEW YORK. 

Manha tta n Trust C ompany, 

Capital and Surplus, $1,220,000. 

TRANSACTS A GENERAL TRUST AND BANKING BUSINESS. 



Francis Ormoxd French, 

August Belmont, .... New York 

C. C. Baldwin, .... New York 

H. W. Cannon, .... New York 

T. J. Coolidge, Jr., . . . Boston 

R. J. Cross, New York 

John N. A. Griswold, . . New York 

John R. Ford New York 



DIRECTORS, 18Q2. 

New York ; John Kean, Jr., 



H. O Northcote, 
E. D. Randolph, 
A. S. Rosen baum, 
James O. Sheldon, 
Samuel R. Shipley, 
Charles F. Tag, 
R. T. Wilson, 



H. L. Higginson, 



FRANCIS O. FRENCH, President. 



Poston John I. Waterbury, 
OFFICERS, 



Elizabeth, N. J. 

New York 

. New York 

New York 

. New York 

Philadelphia 

New York 

New York 

New York 



JOHN I. WATERBURY, Vice-President. 



A. T. FRENCH, Secy and Treas. 



84 



-*&* GRAND CONCERTS 



BY 



€pG 




S ^egimeet Ucaeel, 



N. G. S. N. Y. 



WILLIAM BAYNE, Conductor. 



Tuesday, May 3d, 1892 



PROGRAM 



Overture, 
Gems from 
Valse, 

Selection from 
American Patrol, 



PART I. 

" Fidelio," 

" Cavalleria Rusticana," 

" Special Reports." 

"The Huguenots" 

(New) 



Beethoven 
Mascagni 

Czibulka 

Meyerbeer 

Brooks 



PART II. 

6. Chorus and Cavatina, . . " Girumende," 

7. Cornet Solo, .... Selected, 

Mr. Charles petit. 

8. Grand Polonaise and Air de Ballet, 

From " Flora McDonald,' 

9. Selection from .... "Macbeth," 

10. Dance Africaine, . . . " Cocoanut Dance," 



Marcadante 
Hartman 



Urich 
Verdi 
Gilder 



P^RT III. 

11. Overture, .... "Guy Mannering," 

12. American Dance Characteristic, . 

13. Reminiscences of the Bards of Erin, 

14. Valse di Concerto, . . " Estudiantina," 

15. Galop, ..... " Narren Carnival," 



Bishop 

Bendix 

Godfrey 

Waldteufel 

Gzins;! 



85 



Phillips, Doup At Co., 

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LEADING RETAILERS. 



St. Cloud Hotel, 

Broadway & 42d St., 
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RAND BROTHERS. 



-*E* GRAND CONCERT 



BY 



Lander's Orchestra 



J. M. LANDER, Director. 



Wednesday, Ms^y 4tU, IS OS. 



PROGRAM. 



9- 
10. 
ii. 

12. 

13- 
H- 

15- 



March, 

Selection, 

Paraphrase, 

Memoirs, . 

Waltz, 

March, 

Selection, . 

Intermezzo, 

Polka, 

Selection, 

Potpourri, . 



"Russian," Strauss 

" La Giaconda," Ponchielli 

" Melody in F," Rubinstein 

" Tannhauser" (Wagner), Hamm 

" Kaiser," Strauss 

. " La Reine de Saba," Gounod 

"Tyrolean," C. Zeller 

" Cavalleria Rusticana," Mascagni 

"Wildfeuer," Strauss 

"La Cigale," ........ Audran 

"Aida," Verdi 



Intermezzo, . . . . " Naila," 

Selection, " Robin Hood," 

Waltz, . . . . "Anged'Amour," 

Wedding Festival, ..." March," 



Delibes 

De A'oven 

Waldteufel 

. Jensen 



87 




Sold by all Popular Clubs, Hotels, Cafes 
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• • • MAKEBS, • • • 

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88 



-*&* GRAND CONCERTS 



BY 



E/niest "Nfeyei^ S'wky Thektfe Oi c clie$ti c k, 



ERNEST NEYER, Conductor. 



Thursday, IVTay Sth, 18 9 3 



PROGRAM 



March, 

Overture, 

Waltz, 

Selection, 

Danse, 

Polonaise 

Divertissement, 

Polka, 

Cornet Soi.o, . 



" Exposition," 

"Jubilee," 

" Sonntagskind,' (" Child of Fortune, 

" Cavalleria Rusticana," 

" Espagnole," 

" Militaire," 

".Meistersinger," 

" Couci Couca," (New), 



Waltz, .... 

Selection, 

Dance of the Bayadere, . 

Waltz, .... 

Conjuration et Bknediction, 

Galop, 



Trompeter von Sackingen, 
MR. WM. BURMESTER. 

" Pasman," (N'cw), 

" Robin Hood," 

(Feremors ) 

'Angelina," (Lion Tamer,) 

" Les Huguenots," . 



-New, 



Fahrbach 

von Sitppe 

Millocker 

Mascagni 

Fliege 

Chopin 

Wagner 

Fahrbach 

Nessler 



" On With the Dance," 



Strati ss 

De Koven 

Rubinstein 

Klngescheid 

Meyerbeer 

Strauss 




90 



~€¥ GRAND CONCERT 4>- 



BY 



§* Berths teirys Orchestra, 4 



ADOLPH BERNSTEIN, Conductor. 



Friday, May 6 th, 1892 



program:. 



March, 

Overture, 

Selection, 

Gavotte, 

Selection, 



PART I. 

" jubilee," 
'" Raymond," 

"Carmen," 
Little Darling,' 
" Tyrolean," 



Fahrbacli 

Thomas 

Bizet 

Eilenberg 

Zeller 



Finale, 
Waltz, 
Selection, 

Galop, 
Intermezzo, 



PART II. 

" Lohengrin," 

' The White Rose," 

" Cavalleria Rusticana," 

" On the Minute," 
Love's Dream After the Ball," 



Wagner 

Bernstein 

Mascagni 

Wohawka 

Czibalka 



ii. Overture, 

12. Waltz, 

13. Selection, 

14. Polka, 
1=;. March, 



PART III. 

College Songs," 

" Tout Vienne," 

" Tannhauser," 

" Rococo," . 



Suppe 

Strauss 

Wagner 

Waldteufel 



"Coronation," ....... Meyerbeer 



The New York Life Insurance Co. 

BEGS LEAVE TO ANNOUNCE THAT ITS 
TWENTY -YEAR TONTINE POLICIES, 

ISSUED IN 1872, ARE NOW MATURING, 
WITH THE FOLLOWING RESULTS 



3- 



/. 
Ordinary Life Policies are returning from 20 to 52 per cent. 
in excess of their cost. 

Twenty -Year Endowment Policies are returning from 58 to 
j l per cent, in excess of their cost. 

Limited-Payment Life Policies are returning from 43 to 141 
per cent, in excess of their cost. 

These Returns are m uie after Twenty Years' Insurance. 



II. 
t . Persons insured under Ordinary Life Policies may, in lieu of 
the above cash values, continue their insurance, at original rates, 
and receive CASH DIVIDENDS of from 71 ton 5 per cent, 
of all p/emiums paid, and annual dividends hereafter as they 
ace rue. 

2. Persons insured under Limited-Payment Life Policies may, 
in lieu of the a bove cash values, continue their insurance, 
without further payments , and receive CASH DIVIDENDS 
of from 67 to 163 per cent of all premiums paid, and annual 
dividends hereafter as they accrue. 

III. 
Persons desiring to see results on policies issued at their present age, 
and further particulars as to options in settlement, will 
please address the Company, giving date of birth. 



JOHN A. McCALL, President. 
HENRY TUCK, Vice-President. 



New York Life Insurance Co., 

346 &• 348 BROADWAY, 
NEW YORK. 



92 



-*g* GRAND CONCERTS 

BY 



J5oi/</i;> Qov\Xe/c>\id $ 14 M cHea. W^anb. 



JV. G. S. N. Y. 



LOUIS CONTERNO, Director. 



Saturday, IVTav rth, 1892 



PROGRAM 



Grand March, 
Overture, . 
Waltz, . 
Selection, . 
Cornet Solo, 



PART I. 

" 14th Regiment," . 

" Le Domino Noir," 

" The Postillion," 

" Wang," 

Selected, 

MR. W. S. MYCRANTS. 



Conterno 

A uber 

Fahrbach 

Boettger 

Rollison 



PART II. 



Selection, 

Cocoanut Dance, . . . Character Piece, 

Gems from Red Hussar, "Paul Jones," " Poor Jonathan," 

Gavotte, ....." Enthusiasm/' 

Night Alarm, .... Descriptive Piece, 



" Last of the Hogans," ...... Braham 

Herman 



Synopsis. — A calm and peaceful night. Ten o'clock — Lights out. All in 
bed — Choral. The Alarm. Fire, Fire, Box 32. Horses rush out, 
hitch up and off. The gallop to the fire. Engines at work. Fire 
out. Recall. March home. Chorus — " Home Again.'' 



Moses 

Bernstein 

Reeves 



Selection, 
Patrol, 
Waltz, . 
Dance, 
Galop, . 



PART III. 

" Scotland," 
" American," 
" La Serenata," 
" Ethiopia," 
" Railroad," 



Wiegand 

MeacJiam 

a" Arcy Jaxom 

Reeves 

Gungl 






t : 



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The Century Magazine. 

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A number of important serial features announced for appearance in The Century during the 
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MAY NUMBER. 

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A series of profusely illustrated articles on the World's Fair buildings, by Henry Van Brunt, 
the well-known architect. 

t4 THE CHOSEN VALLEY." 

A novel of Western Life, by Mary Hallock Foote. Illustrated by herself. 



All these begin in the May Century. In addition, that number wiil contain complete stories by 
Thomas Nelson Page and the late Wolcott Balestier, an illustrated article on " Yachting," " Home- 
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From The Autobiography of Joseph Jefferson. 

JOSEPH JEFFERSON AS "RIP VAN WINKLE." 



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108 




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114 




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HARRY C. MINER. 




117 



f* TRUTH. 4 

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118 




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V 



r I ^HB name Glove-Fitting, as applied to the Celebrated Corsets, is 
-*- no fancy title : Every lady ever having zuorn them knows 
that they fit like a glove and are delightfully comfortable. One of 
our leading dressmakei s says of them, "/ would rather fit a dress 
over a Glove-Fitting Corset than any other." These goods are justly 
renowned all over the world, and can be seen and purchased at all 
high class dry goods establishments. 

LANGBON, BATGHELLER & GO., 

MANUFACTURERS, 

NEW YORK AND CHICAGO. 



120 




ISABELLA EROUHART. 



Tfje National Con^fVatso^ of Mu0ic of America. 

126 and 128 EAST 17th ST., NEW YORK. 

Incorporated September 21, 1885. 

President, Mrs. Jeannette M. Thurber. Treasurer, Hon. Henry W. Cannon. 

Secretary, Charles Inslee Pardee, A. M. 
Founded for the benefit of Musical Talent in the United States, and conferring its benefits free upon all 
applicants sufficiently gifted to warrant the prosecution of a thorough course of studies, and unable to pay for 
the same, and upon others of the requisite aptitude on the payment of a small fee. 

To American Composers and Authors: 

The National Conservatory of Music of America, desirous of emphasizing the engagement of 
Dr. Antonin Dvoralr. as its Director by a special endeavor to give an additional impulse to the 
advancement of music in the United States, proposes to award prizes for the best Grand or Comic 
Opera (Opera Comique\ for the best Libretto for a Grand or Comic Opera (Opera Comique), for the 
best Piano or Violin Concerto, and for the best Symphony, Oratorio and Suite, or Cantata, each and 
all of these works to be composed or written by composers and librettists born in the United States 
and not above thirty-five years of age. The prizes shall be as follows : 

SUBJECTS AND PRIZES. 

For the best Grand or Comic Opera (Opera Comique), words and music, - $1,000 

For the best Libretto for a Grand or Comic Opera (Opera Comique), - - 500 

For the best Symphony, ----------- 500 

For the best Oratorio, ----------- 500 

For the best Suite or Cantata, --------- 300 

For the best Piano or Violin Concerto, -------- 200 

GENERAL CONDITIONS. 

1. Each work must be in manuscript form and absolutely new to the public. 

2. Its merits shall be passed upon by a special jury of five or more competent judges. 

3. The works to which the prizes shall be awarded shall be made known to the public under the 
auspices of the National Conservatory of Music of America, whose operatic conductors, vocalists, 
instrumentalists, choral forces, etc., insure an ensemble that must add largely to the effectiveness 
of the compositions. 

4. The National Conservatory of Music of America reserves the right to give three public per- 
formances of the works to which prizes shall be awarded ; these shall afterwards be the property of 
the composers and authors. 

5. Manuscripts shall be sent for examination, to the above address, between September 1st and 
October 15th, 1892. The award of prizes will be made on or about November 15th, 1S92. 

THE JURIES: 

Mr. George P. Goodale, 



GRAND OPERA. 

Dr. Antonin Dvorak. 
Mr. George W. Chadwick, Boston. 
Mr. Arthur Nikisch, Boston. 
Signor Romualdo Sapio, New York. 
Herr Anton Seidl, New York. 

OPERA COMIQUE. 
Dr. Antonin Dvorak. 
Signor Paolo Giorza, New York 
Mr. Bruno Oscar Klein, New York. 
Herr Adolf Neuendorff, New York. 
Mr. Frank van der Stucken, New York 

LIBRETTO. 
Dr. Antonin Dvorak. 
Mr. Thomas Bailey Aldrich, Boston. 
Mr. Elwyn A. Barron, Chicago. 
Mr. C. A. Bratter, New York. 
Mr. Henry A. Clapp. Boston. 
Mr Eugene Field, Chicago. 



Detroit. 

Col. Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Boston. 
Mr. M. G. Seckendorff, Washington. 
Mr. Edmund C. Stedman, New York. 
Mr. Benjamin Edward Woolf, Boston. 
Mr. William Winter, New York. 

ORATORIO AND CANTATA. 
Dr. Antonin Dvorak. 
Mr. Dudley Buck, Brooklyn. 
Mr. William W. Gilchrist, Philadelphia. 
Mr. Benjamin J. Lang, Boston. 
Mr. William L. Tomlins, Chicago. 

SYMPHONY, SUITE, VIOLIN AND 
CONCERTOS. 
Dr. Antonin Dvorak. 
Mr. Asger Hamerik, Baltimore. 
Mr. Rafael Joseffy, New York. 
Prof. John K. Paine, Boston. 
Mr. Xaver Scharwenka, New York. 



123 




ANTONIN DVORAK, 
Director of the National Conservatory of Music. 




-^Z/lns~B~~ » 



4{aye You Tried It? 



L F COURSE you have seen the HANAN Shoe, 
but have you ever tried it ? As fine as it is to 
look upon, no one can realize its surpassing merit 
until he wears it. Upon the recommendation of a 
multitude, will you not venture a trial ? 



H 



anan 



& s 



on. 



AT RETAIL. 



207 Broadway, cor. Fulton St. 

297)4 Broadway, bet. Reade and Duane Sts. 

1203 Broadway, cor. 29th St., New York. 

365 Fulton St., Brooklyn, opp. City Hail. 



BRANCH STORES: 

PHILADELPHIA .-. BOSTON .\ CHICAGO .-. 

v CLEVELAND .\ MILWAUKEE and BUFFALO. 



124 




GEO. FAWCETT ROVVE. 



T- 



\}% *> Spirit « of - k\)% - 5i/r\^s 



1831 : Daily Edition : 1892 



■AND ' 



The Spirit of the Times 

AND 

The /New CJork Sportsman, 



CONSOLIDATED WEEKLY EDITION. 



All I be Dramatic and Sporting News of the World 



The Daily Spirit of the Times is the only 
Paper deyoted exclusively to the 



Drama, Racing, Trotting, . . . 

. . Field Sports, Athletics and Aquatics. 



"A Learned Spirit of Human Dealings." 

Othillo, Act III. 



publishing and general offices, 

1 1 = Frankfort = 5 tn ^ t: ' * N^ * i°r% 



Subscription S10 per year, postpaid . 

ORDER FROM YOUR NEWSDEALER. 



126 




MODJESKA. 



Tm NEW YORK CLIPPER 

40th Year. 

Tl^e Reco^Qizeci ■ Authority ir) ArQuseroept Affairs. 



BRIGHT AND 



RELIABLE 



THEATRICAL 



NEWSPAPER. 




IT 



CIRCULATES 



ALL 



OVER THE 



WORLD. 



Issued EZvery Wednesday. e==- 



PRICE, 10 CENTS. 



The Y™\ Queeq Dublighing [Jomp&niJ (Limited), 

PROPRIETORS, 

george w. keil, Manager. Clipper BuildiDg, 88 & 90 Centre Street, New York, 



128 



p 



ROCTOR'S THEATRE. west 23 d street. 



N. HAT1NEES 

EVERY EVENING AT 8:15. ^ WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY. 



ACROSS 



POTOMAC 



A :• R O M A N C E < O E : T H E : LATE: W A R 

BY AUGUSTUS PITOU AND EDWARD M. ALFRIEND. 

Produced under the personal supervision of AUGUSTUS PITOU. 



Among the Previous Successes of this 



DISTINGUISHED PLAYHOUSE 

\ \ 

May be mentioned in chronological order the following 



THE COUNTY FAIR, .... Played 15 weeks. 
GREAT METROPOLIS. ... 7 

SHENANDOAH "26 

ALL THE COMFORTS OF HOME, " 7 



MEN AND WOMEN, .... Played 23 weeks. 

MR. WILKINSON'S WIDOWS, " 17 " 

THERMIDOR " 6 " 

THE LOST PARADISE, . . "16 " 



THE ENGLISH ROSE, played 6 weeks. 

Average Weekly Gross Receipt l s,{ Fr 7/i e £t*} $5, 7 '6 j.oo. 



All communications to F. F. PROCTOR. 



132 




'.. ^-J^tir. 



MARGARET MATHER. 



ESTABLISHED 1S8O 



INCORPO ^4TED 1891 




Wrought. & "C^Irom^&pe^. - 
& Brass Work 

I and electric 

RIIOG. 



OFFICE 

106-110 CENTRE ST. 



WAREHOUSES 

100-110 WHITE ST. 
155-157 LEONARD ST 

DecoYork. 



(lew ht\ \ Cuba Mail ^eam^ip [SompaniJ, 

THE ONLY AMERICAN LINE RUNNING TO CUBA AND MEXICO. 

The magnificent Iron and Steel, large and powerful 
new Steamers of this Line sail regularly 

EVERY SAT J R DAY ^° r Havana, Progreso, Tampico, Tuxpam, 
-^ mh^. Campeche, Frontera, Laguna and Vera Cruz. 

EVERY WEDNESDAY For Havana ' Matanzas, Cardenas 
in i I, and Sagua, alternately 

EVERY FORTNIGHT For Nassau » Santiago de Cuba and 

^anuBaBMBaaa^iB. CienfuegOS 

For pamphlets, time tables and general information, apply to 

JAMES E. WAIVD 3c CO., 

113 WALL STREET, NEW YORK. 



134 




REHAN, CROSSMAN AND LEWIS. 



J.B./1\^lfatri<K 



# 



5 0| ?> 



ARCHITECTS, 

No. 1 193 Broadway, New York. 
EAT^ICAL WORK 



A SPECIALTY 



*J\ MOiNG the Theatres designed 
«•» and built by this firm are the 
following : 

Broadway Theatre, ... - New York City. 

Manhattan Opera House, ... » " 

Harlem Opera House, - " 

Standard Theatre, " " 

Herrmann's Theatre, - " " 

Columbus Theatre, - " " 

Bijou Theatre, - " li 

Empire Theatre, " " 

Abbey's New York Theatre, - - " " 

Amphion Academy, - Brooklyn. 

Park Theatre, - ll 

u The Gayety, ' - il 

National Theatre, - - Washington, D. C. 

Court Square Theatre, - - - Springfield, Mass. 

Broadway Theatre, - Norwich, Conn. 

" The Russwin," - - - New Britain, Conn. 

Opera House, ..... Lowell, Mass. 

Jacob's Theatre, - Newark, N. J. 

Corinne Lyceum, ... - Buffalo, N. Y. 

Detroit Opera House, .... Detroit, Mich. 
Fuller Opera House, .... Madison, Wis. 
Warder Grand, .... Kansas City, Mo. 

Theatre Vendome, .... Nashville, Tenn. 

Grand Opera House, - Memphis, Tenn. 

Memphis Theatre, .... " " 

Metropolitan Opera House, - - - St. Paul, Minn. 
Tremont Theatre, .... Boston, Mass. 

"The Gaiety," - " •' 

Park Theatre, .... Philadelphia, Pa. 

Girard Ave. Theatre, ... " " 

" The Bijou," _____ '* " 

Grand Opera House, .... " " 

National Theatre, " " 

Duquesne Theatre, .... Pittsburgh, " 

Grand Opera House, - - - _ " " 

Bijou Theatre, " " 

Chicago Opera House, - - - - Chicago, 111. 

People's Theatre, " " 



Grand Opera House, - - - Cincinnati, Ohio. 

Robinson's Opera House, - 

Havlin's Theatre, - 

Walnut St. Theatre, - - . - 

McAuley's Theatre, ... - Louisville, Ky. 

Opera House Building, _ _ - 

Masonic Temple Theatre, 

Harris' Theatre, _ - - - - 

Evansville Grand, - - - - Evansville, Ind. 

O'Brien's Opera House, - - Birmingham, Ala. 

Grand Opera House, . _ - - 

The Auditorium, ... Spokane Falls, Wash. 

Opera House Building, ... - Kearney, Neb. 

Olympic Theatre, St. Louis, Mo. 

li The Hagan," _ - - - - 

Grand Opera House, ... - 

Pope's Theatre, - 

Havlin's Theatre, - 

Standard Theatre, _ _ . - 

Music Hall Exposition, - 

Entertainment Hall Exposition, 

DeGive's Opera House, - - - Atlanta, Ga. 

English's Opera House, - - - Indianapolis, Ind. 

Boyd's New Theatre, .... Omaha, Neb. 

Boyd's Opera House, - - - - 

" The Lansing," Lincoln, Neb. 

Funk's Opera House, - - _ - 
Grand Opera House, - - - . Syracuse, N. Y. 
Opera House, - - Jersey City, N. J. 

Academy of Music, - - - - 

Taylor's Opera House, - . - - Trenton, N. J. 
Opera House, - - - - San Antonio, Tex. 

Opera House, .... Fort Worth, Tex. 

Opera House, .... Hot Springs, Ark. 

Opera House, .... Fort Smith, Kans. 

Opera House, .... Montgomery, Ala. 

Opera House, .... Chattanooga, Tenn. 

Opera House, .... Shreveport, La. 



136 




EMMA SHERIDAN. 



23 fore Street, Uondoq. 




The Ansonia Clock Co., 



MANUFACTURERS OF 



Clocks and J^ron^es, 



11 Cliff Street, 

NEW YORK 
■■HBaBH 




.^.t^)^. 



133 Wabasi} ^.vcquc, Chicago, 111. 



138 



PflI«?;i^?:'S5 




Equal to 

the 

Finest 

Imported 

Brands. 



El Telegrafo 

Key West *\* 
■Havana Cigars 




For : Sale : by : Dealers : Everywhere. 



The- 



^njemcaij jj)istract ^] elegraplj x^o. 

Furnishes Messenger, Police and Fire Service 



Produce Exchange, 

134 Pearl Street, 

16 Broad Street, 

36 New Street, 

120 Broadway, 

10 Wall Street, 

120 Front Street, 

68 Fulton Street, 

151 Church Street, 

195 Broadway, 

Cotton Exchange, 

281 Broadway, 

142 West Street, 

Pier 4 i, N. R., 

316 Greenwich Street, 

233 Grand Street, 

407 Broadway, 

255 Church Street, 

444 Broome Street, 

599 Broadway, 

Gansevoort Market, 

386 West Street, 

no West 14th Street, 

8th Street & University Place, 

201 East 14th Street, 

854 Broadway, 

70 Eighth Avenue, 

344 Third Avenue, 

8 West 23d Street, 



FROM THE FOLLOWING OFFICES. 



8 A. M 

7 " 
7 " 
7 " 
7 " 



to 7 P. M. 

" 8 " 

" 7 " 

7 " 
11 6 i. 

11 6 ,. 

8 " " 6.30 P. M. 

6 " "8 P. M. 

7 " "6 " 
Always Open. 

8 A. M. to 6 P. M. 

7 " 7 " 
7.30' " 6 " 

8 " "6 " 
8 " "6 " 

Always Open. 

7 A. M. to 9 P. M. 
g 11 u g 11 

8 " "6 " 
Always Open. 

8 A. M. to 6 P. M. 

7 " "6 " 

8 " " a " 
Always Open. 

7 A. M. to 9 P.M. 

Always Open. 
7.30 A. M. to 9 P. M. 
7 " " 9 " 

Always Open. 



270 West 23d Street, 

1 140 Broadway, 

Manhattan Market, 

1227 Broadway, 

270 West 34th Street, 

401 Fifth Avenue, 

666 Sixth Avenue, 

Grand Central Depot, 

821 Sixth Avenue, 

539 Fifth Avenue, 

47th Street and Third Avenue, 

990 Sixth Avenue, 

985 Eighth Avenue, 

1059 Third Avenue, 

45th Street and First Avenue, 

1369 Third Avenue, 

1170 Ninth Avenue, 

763 Madi-son Avenue, 

987 Madison Avenue, 

81st Street and Ninth Avenue, 

(E. R. R. Down town 
93d Street and Ninth Avenue, 
1616 Third Avenue, 
268 West 116th Street, 
2097 Third Avenue, 
134 East 125th Street, 
53 West 125th Street, 
264 West 125th Street, 
2300 Seventh Avenue, 



Always Open. 

A. M. to 9 P. M. 

Always Open. 
A. M. to 9 P. M. 

Always Open. 



7 A. M. to 9 P. M. 
Always Open. 



side.) 
8 A. M. to 9 P. M. 

7 » ;; 9 ;: 
7 9 

Always Open. 

7 A. M. to 9 P. M. 

7.30 " " 9 P. M. 



140 




JOHN DREW. 




THE PRIDE OF THE HOUSEHOLD. 



142 




E. H. SOTHERN. 



United States Dynamite ^ Chemical Co. 



MANUFACTURERS OF ALL GRADES OF 



<< VULCAN BLASTING POWDERS 



Vulcanite and (gelatine Dynamite. 



OFFICE : 

3S "Raft Street, J{zw Ijork. 

Telephone, 580 Cortlandt. 



Southern Agent : 

J. B. WADSWORTH 

Birmingham, Ala. 



*pA/NP DHILL CO., 






•7i«> in- 



^oclx P^illiQg, 

MiQiQg lylactHQeFy 



It* "W 



23 Pa*rk Place, Mew CJo*rk. 



144 




From The Autobiography of Joseph Jefferson. ~~ 

JOHN T. RAYMOND AS "COL. SELLERS.' 



RANDEL, BAREMORE & BILLINGS, 



IMPORTERS OF 



— DIAMONDS 






AND MANUFACTURERS OF 



DIAMOND JEWELRY, 

58 Nassau St. <$ 29 Maiden Lane, I St. Andrew's St., Holborn Circus, 

NEW YORK. LONDON, E. 0. 



( empli merits of 

M99RE & SGHI2EY 

80 BROADWAY. 



146 




ROSINA YOKES. 



have: vou seieiinj it? 

HAVE YOU DINED THERE? Where? Why, at "The Columbia" on Union Square. The talk 
of all New York. The most luxurious and magnificent place of its kind in the world. A perfect 
palace of delight, it stands unrivaled, and is first, last and all the time the best place in the 
city to obtain a table d'hote dinner, a lunch, a box of delicious confections, or a glass of most refresh- 
ing soda drawn hot or cold, with syrups made from pure fruit juices. Your attention is first drawn 
to " The Columbia" by its exquisitely arranged windows, each being composed of one solid slab of 
priceless onyx, dazzling in its purity and whiteness, and on these are arranged with rare lact and 
skill the choicest confections. But once across the threshold and all else fades into insignificance. 
"Surely," you exclaim, " this must be Aladdin's palace." A vista of Mexican onyx, French plate 
mirrors, tapestries, plush and silk draperies, mosaic floors, moquet carpetings, and myriads of electric 
lights, twinkling like phantom will-o'-the-wisps from diamond-cut glass globes, is presented to your 
view, making a scene unequaled in its beauty, enthralling, entrancing, and, once seen, will ever 
linger in your memory like a strain of heavenly music. As you enter the door the soda fountain first 
claims your attention, and well it might, for it is the largest, the handsomest and the most expensive 
ever made. Next come the counters of solid onyx, laden with sweets unsurpassed for purity and 
delicious flavor ; then back of this the restaurant, seating 1,000. The band is playing, now soft and 
low, soothing your tired nerves, now stirring your very soul with a merry waltz. Well could you 
imagine yourself in fairyland, for rich tapestrieg adorn the walls and Persian rugs the floor, and 
splendor and magnificence are found within the door. But you with difficulty arouse yourself from 
the spell cast upon you by the beauty of your surroundings, and lo ! like magic you are served with 
course after course of the choicest viands Everything as tempting to the palate as the environments 
are to the eye. Surely more than this could not be said. 

The accommodations for private dinner or theatre parties are such as to make even the most exacting delighted with the 
almost inexhaustible resources of this wonderful place. To fully appreciate the banquet rooms they must be seen. No pen can 
do justice to their luxurious furnishings. " The Columbia " is open every day in the year from 6 a.m. until midnight. The 
cost of fitting up this palatial edifice was $S6,ood. Everywhere is displayed the most refined taste and thorough knowledge of the 
beautiful in art. Not in a single instance could a suggestion be made that could add to its beauty or the comfort and satisfaction 
of its guests. The prices are marvelously moderate, the table d'hote dinner from 5 to S P. M. being but 75 cents. Charming music 
for banquets or dancing is furnished gratis. 



YOU WOULD NOT WEAR A FADED HAL 

Faded and vJlIi^in^led Shades loo^ just as badly. 

But you say new ones will fade just as quickly as the old ones did. 
The same kind will, but 



Wiggin's Sun-Fast Rocksonia 



Holland Window Shades 



will not. 

The only Hollands guaranteed not to fade by exposure to the sun. 
NEW AND DESIRABLE COLORS. 

Send address for sample book of colors lo 

H. B. WIGGIN'S SONS, Manufacturers, 
ASK YOUR UPHOLSTERER FOR THEM. 124 CLINTON PLACE, NEW YORK. 

148 







LADY AND BIRD. 
Loaned by the Theatre Magazine. 




o 
< 

id 



<3 






/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/ 



The 

1892 

Model 

of the 



Remington 



on the market. 




WyckofT, 

Seamans & 

Benedict 
327 

Broadway 

New York, U. S. A. 



Constant improvement has char- 
acterized the history of the Reming- 
ton Standard Typewriter. 

The new Model presents no start- 
ling novelty, and involves no radical 
departure from the principles of con- 
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by 20 years' experience. 

The changes introduced into the 
1892 model represent the carefully 
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rious points deemed capable of im- 
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Old users of the Remington will 
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STANDARD WRITING MACHINE 
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OUR GOODS ARE SOLD IN ALL 
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:/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/^/ 



153 



Hotel [\\ar\borou<!>\), 



BROADWAY, 

Bet. 36th and 37th Streets, 
NEW YORK. 



One of the largest Hotels on 
Broadway, containing . . . . 



pour JHupdr^d F^oo^s. 



Two Hundred of which are con- 
nected with private bath. 

Conducted on both the 

AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN 

Systems. 

LOUIS D. TODD, Manager. 



54 




LEVY SISTERS. 



THE EAST RIVER 
MILL AND LUMBER CO. 



FOOT 92D AND 93D STS., E. R., NEW YORK. 



DEALERS IN 



.Qumber. 



and ^imber. 



ALL KINDS OF ROUGH AND DRESSED LUMBER, AND YELLOW PINE 
FLOORING AND STEP PLANK. 

KILN DRIED NORTH CAROLINA PINE FLOORING. 



GEO. H. TOOP, PRESIDENT. 

J. N. HAVENS, sec'y & treas. 

THOS J. CROMBIE, general manager. 






Telephone 1SO, 79th Street. 




Grand Rapids School Furniture Co, 



MANUFACTURERS OF 



AUTOMATIC, NOISELESS, FOLDING 

205,000 Sold and Shipped within 
less than 3 years 



Over 75 Styles to select from. 
From $1.00 Each upwards. '.' 

Originators, Patentees and Sole Owners of the 
Perfect Automatic or Self-folding Seat Theatre 
Chairs. 

Send for Descriptive Catalogue anil Prices, 



General Eastern Office and Salesroom, 

34 gast 14tb gt., Hew Yor^. 

-=»FACTORY-CRAND RAPIDS, MICH.-4*- 



156 




THE THREE TEXANS. 




158 



!1 O INSU 



RE PROMPTNESS AND CORRECTNESS, SEND ALL your cablegrams b y 

U/eStoi] Unioq Telegraph Co, 

The Largest Telegraphic System in Existence. 



^ATLANTIC CABLE SERVICED 



Two American Cables Direct from 

/New CJork City to Great Britain, 

CONNECTS ALSO WITH 
FOUR ANG-LO-AMERICAN CO.'S CABLES 

« AND ' 

ONE DIRECT UNITED STATES CO.'S CABLE. 



DI RECT COMMUNICATION WITH GERMANY ^ N - D FRANCE. 

CABLE connection with CUBA, WEST INDIES, MEXICO, NASSAU, 
and CENTRAL and SOUTH AMERICA. 



-Messages Sent to and "Received from all Parts of the World. 



21,000 OFFICES IN AMERICA. 

OFFICES IN GREAT BRITAIN: 
LONDON: LIVERPOOL: A5 EXCHANGE BUILDINGS. 

NO. 21 ROYAL EXCHANGE, E. C. CLASCOW : NO. 29 CORDON STREET. 

NO. 109 FENCHURCH STREET, E. C. BRISTOL: BACKHALL CHAMBERS. 

159 




RICHMOND 






Ptti 



STRAIGHT UUT JNO 



A 



CIGARETTES. 



/"^igarette Smokers who are willing to pay a little more than the 
^^^ price charged for the ordinary trade Cigarettes will find THIS 
BRAND superior to all others. 

THE RICHMOND STRAIGHT CUT No. 1 CIGARETTES 

are made from the brightest, most delicately flavored and highest cost Gold Leal grown in Virginia. 
This is the Old and Original brand of Straight Cut Cigarettes, and was brought out by 
us in the year 1875. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS, and observe that the firm name as bei.ow is on 
every package. 

THE ALLEN & GINTER BRANCH 



MANUFACTURERS. 



OF THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO. 

RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. 



Smoke 

Seal of North Carolina 

Plug Cut. 

oG3.1 rlllg Cllt is made of the choicest tobacco 
grown in North Carolina, which is very carefully 
selected and is then still further improved by 
storing in the caske for two years or more until it 
is thoroughly matured and mellow. The result is 
a rich, sweet, cool smoke, so prized by lovers of 
the pipe. 



160 




GERHARDT NIELSEN. 
Painter of the Niagara Falls Cyclorama, igth Street and Fourth Avenue, New York City. 



Charles Seale & Co, 

y) iam®Bds and J?§pe jewels, 



907 BROADWAY, 



Tne Americans, us usual, wear some superb jewels, and by far the most striking woman in 
this respect was Mrs. John Bloodgood, wife of the well-known New York banker. A collarette 
three and -one-half inches wide, completely studded with diamonds, worth $40,000, made by 
Chas. Seale & Co., was the sensation of the evening. — Court Journal, London. 

Dear Mr. Seale : 

While my sister, Mrs. Robert Goelet, is not in need of the sixty-five grain pearl, she 
knows how rare it is to get a fine pearl of such a large size without blemish, and that at 
your price it is a great bargain ; so she has agreed to take it. 

Yours truly, 

George Henry Warren, Jr. 

When any dispute arises about the quality or value of a diamond or a jewel, we con- 
sult Charles Seale. I do not think that there is a member of the Board who would not 
accept his judgment on precious stones without demur. 

John D. Smith, 

Pres. of the New York Stock Exchange. 

While it is true Chas. Seale & Co. sell many thousand dollars worth of diamonds 
annually to members of our Exchange, of course to their advantage, still the members 
are indebted to them also for the unvarying consideration and integrity the firm employs 
in all their dealings. 

Evan Thomas, 

Pres. of the N. Y. Produce Exchange. 

The $5,000.00 star presented to Miss Lillian Russell at the Garden Theatre last February 
was made by Charles Seale & Co. 

CHARLES SEALE & CO., 

907 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 166 REGENT STREET, LONDON. 

162 



'. 



JL 




A ^/ ft 



COPYRIGHT SAROMy 



LILLIAN RUSSELL. 



THE NEW 



EMPIRE THEATRE, 



40th STREET AND BROADWAY 



WILL OPEN ABOUT DECEMBER 15th, 1892, 



Ctyarles protymar/s StoeK Company, 



PRESENTING NEW PLAYS. 



T 



he Company is now appearing in the 

principal cities oF the United States. 



LITHOGRAPHING. 



PHOTOGRAPHING. 



The 

Springer 



L 



ITHOGRAPHING 



GENERAL OFFICES : 

342 West 1 4th Street. 

WORKS (Adjoining)— 

339 to 349 West 1 3th Street. 
666 to 676 Hudson Street. 



PRINTING. 



ORIGINALITY 

AND UNIFORM 

EXCELLENCE. 



Company 

of New York. 



PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHING 



A LEADING SPECIALTY. 
164 




E. H. SOTHERN. 



Tony Pastor's Theatre. 

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173 



Largest Music Plant in America. - - - 
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ORIGINATOR of "POPULAR MUSIC AT POPULAR PRICES," and first 

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186 




RICHARD MANSFIELD. 



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190 




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198 




MUSIZIRENDE ODALISKE. 
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200 



HBOGRM OF THE AFTEipOH. CONCEIJTS4 

OF 

€i^NBsm Heye^'s CQilitai^y Band, 

E.-RN EST NE.HE.-R, Conductor. 

Commencing Tuesday, May 3d, 1892, at 2 P. M. 



Grand March, 

Overture, 

Selection, 

Galop, 

Le Rameaux, . 

March, 

Selection, 

Valse, 

Romanza, 



Gavotte, 

March, . 
Selection, 
Nocturne, 
L'Jugenne 
Medley, . 



Tuesday, May 3d, 1892. 

'La Reine de Saber," ...... Gounod 

" Devotion to Art," ...... Gumbert 

"Gondoliers," ....... Sullivan 

"Cordon Rouge," Diller 

Solo for Cornet and Baritone, ..... Faure 

" Niebelungen," . . . . . . R. Wagner 

Paul Jones, ...... Planquette 

. "Santiago," ....... Corbin 

" Le Clair," ....... Hallevy 



Solo for Baritone and Flute. 
. "Viola," . 
" Glen Island," . 
. "Stradella," . 

" Florine," 
. "Gavotte," . 



. Jerome Hill 

Diller 

Flotow 
Kanski 

Arditi 

Popular Air, ...... Ernest Neyer 



Wednesday, May 4th, 1892. 



March, 

Overture 

Selection, .... 
Cornet Solo, Swan Song, 

Galop 

March, .... 
Grand Selection, . 
Galop, .... 

Andante from Organ Sonata, 
Musical Melange, 

March 

Selection, .... 

Valse, 

Cornet Solo, 

Vox Pc puli, . . . . 



" Gustave." 
" Masaniello," 

"Falka," 

" Lohengrin," 

" Barn Yard," 

Dorscht No. 2, 

Flying Dutchman, 

. "Tally Ho," . 



"Carmen," 
" Heart and Hand," . 
" Espagnole," 
'Where the Violets Grow," 



. Stredicke 

A aber 

Chassaigne 

Wagner 

Fahrbach 

Geo. Wiegand 

Wagner 

. Julius Bernstein 

Dr. Wm. Volkmar 

. E. Boettger 

Bizet 

Lecocq 

Aletra 

French 

Ernest Neyer 



201 



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202 



I. 

2. 

3- 
4- 

5- 
6. 

7- 

S. 

9- 

10. 

1 1 . 

12. 

13- 
14. 

15- 



1. 
2. 

3- 
4- 
5- 
6. 

7- 

8. 

9- 
10. 
11. 
12. 
13- 
14- 
15- 



9- 
10. 
11. 
12. 
13- 
14- 
15- 



Grand March, 

Overture, 

Selection, 

Duetto for Cornets, 

Song, 

March, 

Overture, 

Polka, 

Cornet Solo, 

Valse, 

March, 

Selection, 

Cornet Solo, 

Galop, 

Medley, 



Grand March, . 
Overture, 
Selection, . 
Polish Dance, 
Cornet Solo, 
March, . 
Grand Selection, 
Dans Turque, 
Fackeltanz, 
Intermezzo Sinfonico, 
March, 
Selection, 
Dans Sultanes 
Baritone Solo, 
Popular Airs, . 



Thursday, May 5th, 1892. 

" Folkunger," 

"Jubel," 
" Trebizonde," 

" Caprice," 
. " An Lie," . 



Kretschmer 

C. M.v. Weber 

Offenbach 

Hamm 

Beethoven 



" Breslauer Turner," ....... Faust 



" The Drama," 

"Anvil," 

" Non e'ver." 

''Casino Taenze," 

Glen Island Club," 

. " Lohengrin," . 

" Evening," 

"Dash," 
. Selected. . 



Kerssen 

Parlow 

Mattel 

Gungl 

Diller 

Wagner 

Robbins Battel! 

Wiegand 

E. IVeyer 



Friday, May 6th, 1892. 

" Le Propbete," 

. " Si J'etais Roi," . 

. " Mikado," . 

"No. 1," 

' Serenade," 

" Beggar Student," 

. " Mignon," . 



March, 

Overture, 

Grand Selection, 

La Paloma, 

Cornet Solo, 

Grand March, 

Overture, 

Grand Selection, 

Valse, 

Baritone Solo, 

March, 

Grand Selection, 

Clarinet Solo, 

Galop, 

Medlev, 



Adam 

Sullivan 

Xaver Scharwenka 

Schubert 

Wiegand 

Thomas 

Daniels 

No. 3, ...... . Meyerbeer 

Cavalleria Rusticana," ...... Mascagni 

" Habsburg," ....... Krae 

"Bohemian Girl," ...... Balfe 

. Daniels 
" Belisario," ....... Bellini 

. "Medley," ....... E. Neyer 

Saturday, May 7th, 1892. 

Wagner Motifs, Sonntag 

"Morning, Noon and Night," Suppe 

" Rienzi," ....... Wagner 

" Spanish Fantasie," ...... Yradier 

" Embarrassment," ...... Abt 

"Triumphal," ..... Dr. Volkmar 

" Die Frau Meisterin," ...... Suppe' 

" North Star," ...... Meyerbeer 

"Skaters," ...... Waldteufel 

" Evening Star," ..... Tannhaeuser 

" King Charles," ....... Unralh 

" Child of the Regiment," ..... Donizetti 

" Dinorah," ...... Meyerbeer 

" High Ho," ...... Weingarlen 



'Jollification, 



Geo. Wiegand 



The Press 



Is the only morning newspaper in New 
York which publishes regularly its cir- 
culation figures. 

Average daily sale of THE PRESS 
week ending April 9th, 



•a^a ^=S)' 





105,307, 

An increase of 1,238 over the average for flarch. 







204 



Bijou Jtyeatre, 



BROADWAY, 

BETWEEN 30th AND 31 ST STREETS. 



J. WESLEY ROSENQUEST, Mk SEASON l8 9 2 = 9 3 . 

MANAGER. 'IV* ^ > *> 

fill Nbw Attractions. 

JAMES T. POWERS, In his New Comedy. 

EVANS & HOEY, In their New Farce Comedy. 

LITTLE TIPPETT, Abbott and Teal's Screaming Farce. 

i 

. . . .A.NJD . . . 

(rails' Coiiiediaiis >° ^^t^ jl Society Fad. 



14th Stat Jhe&ltfe, 

J. WESLEY ROSENQUEST, Hanager. 

THE LEADING ■ 



14TH STREET, 

NEAR 6th AVENUE. 



c 



oiT^biQatior) Theatre 

OF NEW YORK. 



Playing Only the Best Attractions. 

205 



Hendricks Brothers, 

BELLEVILLE COPPER ROLLING MILLS, 



IMFORTERS AND 
DEALERS IN 



• METALS. 



49 CLIFF STREET, 



NEW YORK. 




THE only periodical of its kind in the world! It 
is not a professional paper — it is not devoted to 
the tittle-tattle of the stage— it is not a narrow-minded 
gossipy piece of impertinence about the private 
doings of actors. It is a magazine for the patlor 
table ; it is a magazine that fathers, mothers and 
children can read and talk about together — a wholesome, 
courteous and intellectual discussion of the art, with 
breezy digressions into the domain of every-day life. 

REMARKS BY THE PRESS. 

Boston Daily Journal.— One never reads The Thea- 
tre without finding an item of especial interest. 

Chicago Daily News. — The Theatre is a thoroughly 
readable little magazine. 

Albany ArgUS. — The most dignified and scholarly discus- 
sion of theatrical and kindred art subjects to be found in this country 
are contained in The Theatre, edited by Mr. Deshler Welch. * * * 
A magazine which stands absolutely unrivaled in its line. 

Columbus Dispatch.— The Theatre has a number 
of most delightful features. * * * It is a gem that sparkles. 

New York Tribune* — This magazine shows continual 
improvement and appears to be very popular. * * * Bright and 
healthy in tone. 

Boston Home Journal.— The Theatre has been 
something better than a purely theatrical magazine. Its literary as well 
as critical quality have been such as to command respect everywhere. 
Its editors are to be congratulated. 

Detroit Free Press.- Deshler Welch's publi- 
cation, The Theatre, deserves to rank with the leading 
magazines. Its title is rather misleading, as it is by no means 
confined to the stage, being rather a record of the arts in critical 
paragraphs from drama, music, literature and art to social 
sketches. The theatrical criticisms are written in a spirit of 
courtesy and good breeding, and show an independent editor. 
The " Entre Nous " department is a delightful digression 
about men and things. 

New Yorlt Truth.— The Theatre is a clever 
publication, and I hope it is meeting with the success it de- 
serves. It aims at elevating the drama, and should be en- 
couraged. Its illustrations are always extremely good, and its 
letter-press bright and free from personalities. 

Springfield Republican.— It gives the more 
important theatrical news of the day, without the wearisome 
columns of professional news which cumber the weeklies. 

Des Moines Mail and Times.— It heads 
the list of dramatic publications emanating from Gotham. 

Toledo Blade.— It blossoms with the brightest, 
cleverest talk about the stage and its people that can be found 
in this or any other country. 

It reaches the 



Boston Globe.— The Theatre is the select 
dramatic magazine of this country. It has a handsome letter- 
press and a handy form, and contains the choicest matter 
relating to the drama, music, art and literature. 

Baltimore Telegram,— Deshler Welch's theat- 
rical criticisms are specially bright and incisive. 

Pittsburgh Bulletin.— It seems to be written 
by gentlemen for that rare class. 

The New York: Sun.— The Theatre is seem- 
ingly intended to run on a grade higher than the puff and 
abuse line, and therefore deserves to be kept going. 

New Yorlt Home Journal.— The Theatre, 

by the way, is well fitted to be a welcome visitant in home 
circles interested in dramatic matters. It touches also with 
tact and taste upon the allied arts of music, painting and 
sculpture, and makes sallies into the domain of literary criticism. 
The limits of its space not permitting elaborate discussions, it 
is obliged to put what it has to say in pithy and pungent 
paragraphs, and is thus all the more a welcome entertainer ad 
interim. 

£5|p* Advertisers would do well to correspond with The Theatre Magazine. Transient rates, 20c. a line, 
class of people who have money to spend. It circulates throughout the United States. 

THE THEATRE HAGAZINE, 

1180 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. 



206 




207 



L. P. HOLLANDER & CO. 



290 FIFTH AVENUE, 
NEW YORK. 



202 BOYLSTON ST. 
BOSTON. 



Ladieg', tyi^e?' and Childfen/g 
Costumes, 

Street Garments, 

Millinery. 



Continually receiving New Models from our 
Paris connections. 



ZERlINA ROSENrlfLD 



Laura Rosenfield. 



The j ournalist. 

DEVOTED TO 

NEWSPAPERS, AUTHORS, ARTISTS AND 
PUBLISHERS. 

FOUNDED HARCH 22, 1864. 



Published every Saturday. 

Subscription, $4.00 per Year. 



Z & L. ROSENFIELD, 

STENOGRAPHY .^ 



ALLAN POBMAN, Editor and Proprietor. 

OFFICE: 

117 Nassau Street, New York. 



The Official Journal of The International League of Press 
Clubs; 'I he American Newspaper Publishers' Association. 
The Oldest and only Successful Weekly Paper devoted to 
newspapers and the people who make them. 



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AND — 



ormette (or sets 



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25 Pine St. 69 Liberty St. 

44 Broad St. 
25 W. 30th St. 35 Broadway. 



TELEPHONE, 2488 CORTLANDT, 
MEW yCRK. 



S 



Are always made to conform with the prevail- 
ing style of Dresses. 

oinppij BIjO?. 



446 & 448 BROADWAV, 
NEW YORK. 

Importers and Manufacturers. ®i v 




Tie WevSlinghouse Electric and laifadui 

NEW YORK AND PITTSBURGH. 

Manufacturers of alternating and direct current 

Electric Light and Power Apparatus. 



ie iled Electric Light and Pier Con i 



nri 



OFFICE, TIMES BUILDING. 

Licensees for the City of New CjorK, under The Westinghouse Alterna- 
ting Current System of Electric Lighting. 



The Casino, Daly's Theatre, The Academy of Music, Palmer's Theatre and many other 
New York Theatres are now being lighted by this Company. 

J5oT)CPicaQ Publist)ir)g (£©., 

(THE BURDICK PRESS.) 

30 UNION SQUARE, NEW YORK, 

<S^ MANUFACTURE ^ 

ELEGANT SOUVENIRS, HANDSOME PROGRAMMES AND FOLDERS, 

BEAUTIFUL HANGERS. 

^fre moo-t O-tteacti-ue vslreatticaC ^ziyitiuct 

(BY A NEW PROCESS) EVER PRODUCED. 

DESIGNERS, • ENGRAVERS • AND • PRINTERS. 

'ee the Portraits and Engravings in this publication from our establishment. 
SAMPLES AND PRICES ON REQUEST. 



200 



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23D STREET, 

NEAR BROADWAY. 



NEW GROUPS CONSTANTLY ADDED. 

-* POWEEE'S WOl^DEgS. * 



PRESS OPINIONS. 

The Eden Musee last night presented a 
new bill which is bound to be attractive * * 
RFPORDFR P° we 'l ' s an adept sleight-of-hand performer 
nCuUnUCIIi anc j a c ] ever illusionist. * * He is ex- 

ceedingly clever at palming and his tricks are 
novel and unique. * * * He proved to be 
a skillful entertainer and kept the audience 
amused by his droll talk and humorous stories. 
* * * the illusion "She" so mystified the 
audience that even those who knew better — or 
thought they did — were puzzled * * * 
Majilton does a really funny pantomimic act 
and performs some startling feats. * * * 



TIMES. 



WORLD. 



EY. SUN. 



HERALD. 



NEWS. 



Munczi Lajos Orchestra 

Afternoon and Evening. 



Admission, 50 Cents. 

Children, 25 Cents. 




A. M. KIDDER 5 CO., 
"^Bankers, 

No 18 Wall Street, 
NEW goHK. 



A. M. KIDDER. 

H. J. MORSE. 



CHAS. D. MARVIN. 

W. M. KIDDER. 



&dM 



210 



R aymond & whitcomb 

DY luxuriously appointed vestibule trains to Colorado, Yellow- 
Stone National Par k, California, the Pacific Northwest 
and City of Mexico. Incidental trips to Sandwich Islands and 

Alaska. Special trains composed of American-built Sleeping, 
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TOURS FOR PRIVATE CAR PARTIES ARRANGED. 



Raymond & Whitgomb, 31 e ° st mb street ' 

VS> CORNER UNION SQUARE. 



New York. 



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ttHsSfl ... play Printing House in the World ! . . . 'Wgs£>' 

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Theatrical Work one of its Many Features! 

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i ^W The Imprint of the Metropolitan Job Printing 
Concern is on Posters the wide world over, and is 
everywhere recognized as a gu arantee of e xcellence . 

.TWO BLOCKS WEST OF BROADWAY. 

211 



" I'll make Assurance doubly sure and take a bond of Fate." 

— This is what Macbeth said. 

THE MEMBERS OF THE DRAMATIC PROFESSION OF THIS AGE, HOWEVER, TAKE 

A Mutual Life Consol, 



ISSUED BY 



The Mutual Life 



* 



Insurance Company 

+ of New York. 



RICHARD A. McCURDY, President. 



ASSETS OVER = $159,000,000. 



The Consol Policy recently announced by The Mutual Life Insur- 
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INSURANCE 

^^ ENDOWMENT . . M^ 

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No other Company offers this policy. Apply only to Company's 
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The MUTUAC tIFE paid to its CD-I Q C\C\C\ C\C\C\ 
policy-holders in 1891, nearly . . (J)iy,UUU,UUU. 



The Mutual has ever been in the minds of the discriminating public " THE GREATEST 

OF ALL THE COMPANIES." 



212 




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LIBRARY OF 



022 013 895 1 




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